World Fitness Blog : Leading Global Bloggers

April 22, 2021

COVID-19 Travel Update: U.S. Adds 116 Countries to “Do Not Travel” List

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , — admin @ 3:12 pm

If you’ve had a COVID-19 vaccine shot and were dreaming about beaches in Mexico or Brazil, you might want to fantasize about Florida and Hawaii instead. In response to the current state of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. State Department is now advising that U.S citizens reconsider all travel abroad. This comes a few weeks after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said that fully vaccinated people could travel safely within the United States without needing to testing or quarantine (unless states strictly enforced it).


 

On April 26, the State Department said it would boost the number of countries receiving its highest advisory rating (Level 4: Do Not Travel list) to about 80 percent of countries worldwide (that’s 150 destinations). This is a sharp increase from the initial 16 percent (34 countries) placed on the Level 4 list. To be clear, the State Department says this isn’t a reassessment of the current world health situation, but rather it’s meant to better conform to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) own travel advisories.

Then on April 27,

The State Department advisory does, however, reflect a growing vaccine disparity between the United States and the world. Currently, more than half of adult Americans have one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. As of today, about a third of Americans are fully vaccinated. At the current rate of more than 3 million doses a day, 90 percent of Americans, 16 years and older, will be vaccinated by early August. This is one of the highest vaccination rates in the world.


Worldwide, the number of people who have their first vaccine dose is less than 7 percent. Worse, due to new COVID-9 variants and inconsistent public health approaches, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported 5.2 million new cases last week, the most in a single week since the beginning of the pandemic.

“Globally, the number of new cases per week has nearly doubled over the past two months,” WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a press conference last week. “This is approaching the highest rate of infection that we have seen so far during the pandemic.”

More than 3 million people have died from COVID-19 worldwide, including more than 568,000 in the United States.

For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!

Source

April 2, 2021

CDC: Fully Vaccinated People Can Travel Domestically Without Getting Tested or Quarantining

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , — admin @ 8:30 pm

Despite rising COVID-19 cases, the U.S. government is giving the green light: Fully vaccinated people can travel in the United States without getting tested pre- and post-trip or self-quarantine—unless a destination requires it, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This is big news for the 56 million Americans who are now fully vaccinated, as well as the beleaguered travel industry.


 

The CDC says fully vaccinated people can travel in the U.S. without these measures because they’re less likely to get and spread COVID-19, but that travelers should still follow basic precautions. This includes hand washing, staying six feet away from others, and wearing a mask over their nose and mouth. In addition, CDC director Rochelle Walensky made sure to qualify the new guidance in a White House briefing.

“I would advocate against general travel overall,” Walensky said. “Our guidance is silent on recommending or not recommending fully vaccinated people travel. Our guidance speaks to the safety of doing so.”

Currently, more than 100 million Americans have at least one dose of a FDA-approved vaccine. On average, health providers are administering 3 million doses of the vaccines each day. At this rate, 90 percent of adult Americans will be vaccinated by the end of July.


“The science shows us that getting fully vaccinated allows you to do more things safely and it’s important for us to provide that guidance even in the context of rising cases,” Walensky said.

Since February 2020, more than 550,000 in the United States have died from the coronavirus.

For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!

Source

March 4, 2021

The Longer You Stare at a Screen, the Worse Your Health Habits Become

Filed under: Fitness,Health — Tags: , , , — admin @ 6:34 pm

Screen time is way up since the global pandemic began. While it’s an understandable diversion from life during COVID-19, it’s problematic when it comes to the rest of your health. A new study from scientists at Arizona State University shows the longer someone stares at a TV, phone, or computer screen during the day, the worse their health habits are.


 

Interestingly, when researchers broke down the screen use and health behaviors of the roughly 1,000 study participants, they found watching TV was linked to the worst eating habits, while smartphone use was most directly correlated to poor sleep. All screen use has some negative health consequences, says Christopher Wharton, Ph.D., associate professor of nutrition at
Arizona State and co-author of the study, but if you’re going to pick your battles, start by limiting the Netflix binges and shutting off your phone an hour before bed. “Different devices matter for different health behaviors, and we can make more targeted health improvements if we think about use of particular devices,” he says.

Getting away from your devices during COVID takes discipline. “For those who are having to spend more time in front of screens right now for work, such as myself, I take every opportunity to move away from them when work is done,” says Wharton. “I go play with my kids, work out outdoors, do woodworking projects, and pursue new COVID hobbies—I’m learning the violin. All of that delivers way more value for me personally than watching TV, especially after spending my whole day staring at a screen.”

Meanwhile, when you do choose to zone out in front of the tube, keep a bowl of fruit on your coffee table and pre-sliced carrots and cucumbers in a ziplock bag in your fridge so you can pull it out when the game is on. Mindlessly noshing on an entire bowl of fresh veggies with salsa dip vs. a bowl of chips with sour cream dip will save you about 2,000 calories.

For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!

Source

February 19, 2021

Should COVID-19 Sport Titles Count?

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 3:10 pm

It’s an argument you’ve probably had half a dozen times already: Should COVID-19 sport titles count? Here’s our two cents.

Did you hear the one that goes: What do the Dodgers and Lakers have in common with Joe Biden? They probably wouldn’t have won without COVID-19 either. The NBA shutdown last March heralded the full-court disruption of many, many pleasures taken for granted in American life. But while barbershops were shuttered and concert halls converted to pandemic hospitals, the NBA and its co-leagues dutifully shouted “Game back on!” and bravely forged on in their essential role as bellwethers of the collective morale. After all, if a team wins Game 7 and no one is around to cheer and high-five, is it still the champ?


 

We’re kidding, of course. The compacted seasons were played to force TV networks into upholding contracts they’d inked with leagues for billions in ad revenues. Committed to its show-must-go-on principles, the NBA expanded its playoff format to make up missed games. MLB began play after what would have been the 100-game mark in any normal baseball season. And amid a succession of COVID-induced cancellations, the SEC passed off a No. 5 vs. No. 8 matchup featuring football teams with a combined record of 7–2…in November.

Along with canned crowd noise to compensate for empty stadiums, all the TV-driven shenanigans have upset purists, with some caterwauling about illegitimate titles.


Yet nine years after a lockout shortened the 2011–12 NBA season, few remember that all schedules that year were reduced to the number of games played last year by teams that didn’t even make the league’s bubble. Yet no one questions the Miami Heat’s O’Brien Trophy. Fewer recall that in the strike-marred 1987 season, NFL teams played just 12 games using the same rosters with which they started the season—one week was canceled, three were played using scabs. But anyone conscious at the time remembers that the Washington TBD Football Club glue-factoried the Denver Broncos, 42–10.

Winners write history—and America’s major sports leagues are always the winners. Besides, if the Houston Astros’ cheating-marred 2017 World Series win can stand asteriskless, 2020’s COVID-19 champions deserve their own feel-good Disney movies.

For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!

Source

February 8, 2021

How I Found CrossFit and Community During Lockdown

Being a jiu-jitsu practitioner for the last ten years, I have naturally adopted the mindset to stay calm and leverage opportunities. However, it’s tough to practice the art as regularly as you would like because you start to lose muscle memory, rhythm, and accuracy.

That being the case, I had to find another sport that instilled the same discipline while putting myself outside of my comfort zone.

Enter CrossFit Firefly, a box gym I found on Facebook with no website, no significant presence, and no Yelp account. This was going to be interesting.

How I Found CrossFit and Community During Lockdown - Fitness, crossfit, wod, kettlebells, mobility, community, jiu-jitsu, dance, capoeira, rhythm, creative movement, cleans, AMRAP, pandemic, covid-19, box gym, lockdown, brazilian jiu jitsu

Good Coaching Cues Fire Up Neurons

Ferdinand Thieriot taught my first session with a glass-blower turned trainer and co-owner of Crossfit Firefly. While calling me out on my bad form, he eloquently elaborated on the little details that fixed my curved back and form throughout the AMRAP exercises.

It’s not exactly what he said, but how he said it that made it all click.

It was like engaging with an eccentric fitness guru that dedicates his time and effort to perfect the art of training another individual.

His few words opened up a new point of view that resonated with me.

My neurons and nerves were firing as I reinforced the habit of redistributing the weight across my feet rather than just the ball of my feet. And within three weeks, I did a set of cleans with perfect form during the AMRAP WODS.

Building a CrossFit Community

Ferdinand runs and co-owns CrossFit Firefly, established in 2015, with his wife, Tracy Thieriot. They are avid Breaking Muscle readers and credit Chris Holder’s kettlebell instructionals as one of their best resources for form and movement.

While Ferdinand built his career in the fitness industry through strong attention to detail, intense self-awareness, and a specific sense of direction, Tracy relied on her fiery creativity and sense of adventure as a dance communication and ethnic studies major who believes that entropy is her default state. Her modern dance and contact improvisation background led her to find CrossFit and explore other arts like Capoeira and Brazilian jiu-jitsu.

How I Found CrossFit and Community During Lockdown - Fitness, crossfit, wod, kettlebells, mobility, community, jiu-jitsu, dance, capoeira, rhythm, creative movement, cleans, AMRAP, pandemic, covid-19, box gym, lockdown, brazilian jiu jitsu

We instantly connected through sharing our experiences in dance and mobility. Tracy says that doing WODS helps her develop a better sense of managing her center of gravity while exploring mobility and movement through her craft.

As a competitive athlete at 5’11″ with an ectomorph body type, that conversation hit home.

CrossFit is an excellent form of training to get in shape and condition your body if you’re a practitioner specializing in another art form.

The Circle Concept of Energy Transference

If you’ve read this far, then you might realize that Tracy and Ferd are purists who believe in the healing effects of exercise and the impact it has on the community.

They talk about this concept of circle technology—specifically the transference of energy through support, suffering, cheering, and abandoning all pretenses.

It’s raw, and it’s real.

How I Found CrossFit and Community During Lockdown - Fitness, crossfit, wod, kettlebells, mobility, community, jiu-jitsu, dance, capoeira, rhythm, creative movement, cleans, AMRAP, pandemic, covid-19, box gym, lockdown, brazilian jiu jitsu

We’ve all seen the best and worst of each other, so we might as well put in the real work.

You can say that the stars have been aligned for the CrossFit couple to serve the community through their box gym.

When you have all your members asking you to stay open throughout the lockdown, how can you not be motivated to fight for the right to keep your doors open?

Source

February 5, 2021

Itching to Travel? Peep the Best Socially Distanced Places to Visit in 2021

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 6:50 pm

The best places to visit in 2021 are remote and socially distanced locales across America. Thanks to COVID-19, we saw the return of the great American road trip. Eighty percent of travel this fall was by car, an AAA Travel survey found. Outdoor destinations draw the most drivers, whether that’s Keystone, SD (home to Mount Rushmore), or Colorado Springs, CO (both debuted on AAA’s top 10 road trip hot spots). Places near lakes and rivers—like Emory, TX; Slade, KY; and Mannford, OK—saw an uptick in popularity, too.

And with so many people still working from home (82 percent of companies surveyed by Gartner plan to offer remote work post-pandemic), extended vacations are becoming increasingly popular. Airbnb found travelers are seeking stays of more than 28 nights in low-density areas, from western Maine and Vermont to Virginia’s Shenandoah National Park and Whitefish, MT.

Source

January 29, 2021

A Successful Coach or Trainer Needs Emotional Intelligence

Entry-level personal trainers initially rely on a training certificate and a high school diploma to successfully land a job.

However, coaching as a career path requires something more- Emotional Intelligence (EI). According to Melinda Abbott of Columbia University,1 49% or more of successful coaching is derived from a coach’s ability to monopolize emotional intelligence. Moreover, the ability to connect on a social level has been proven to drive motivation and teaching efficacy.

The bottom line is a coach should focus a substantial portion of their time on sports psychology

The Benefits of Conscious Coaching

A well-known coach, Brett Bartholomew, brings up in his book, Conscious Coaching 2 the importance of understanding the types of people you coach. As of late, there is a growing body of evidence surrounding understanding personality types for career success within the workplace and academic performance training.2

However, within the realm of sports, this too is becoming important. As Mark Rippetoe points out in his book Practical Programming for Strength Training,3 a strength coach will spend more time with an athlete during their career individually than any other coach. Therefore, knowing your athlete or client is of utmost importance.3

Focus less on counting reps and focus more on the client’s needs and know when to refer out

Coaches are not licensed to be psychiatrists or medical doctors (unless one holds that title); nevertheless, understanding how EI applies to a client’s lifespan warrants some explanation. EI is a type of social intelligence that involves the ability to monitor one’s own and others’ emotions, discriminate among them, and use the information to guide one’s thinking and actions, according to Salovey & Mayer, 1990. In the context of coaching, this requires first an understanding of how a person approaches being instructed, how one manages failure, success, plateaus, and their interaction with nutrition and overall personal wellness.3,4,5,6 

Emotional Intelligence in Coaching Builds Trust

One of my sessions consisted of six minutes of a client discussing their issues for the day before mobility work and isometric drills. EI allows that client to feel comfortable and builds trust.

Without trust, a client is not likely to follow instructions, and the client does come first.

You can have a Ph.D. in biophysics, but the client could care less; their foci are:

  1. Achieving their intended results
  2. Feeling appreciated

Those six minutes to my client made the remainder of her day far more enjoyable, and she will look forward to her next session. 

As a coach, having a graduate degree makes reading bloodwork easier and discussions with a client’s physician more illuminating. The client learns that you care beyond the aspect of the job; this creates buy-in.2

This client is more likely to refer others to you and participate in higher engagement training

Another client learned quickly that their well being is most important in and out of the competition. During a time such as COVID-19, clients are far more reluctant to engage with their coach, let alone purchase high-fidelity coaching programs.

As clients resurface, it is far more important to cater to mental health needs with the same vigor as a premium program or nutritional plan.

In particular, athletes who face suspension of events or entire seasons may feel displaced without a coach guiding them.

Contrary to popular belief, athletes often suffer more mental illness than average gym patrons.

Furthermore, they are less likely to seek to consult for mental health issues. 

As a coach, it requires that red-flags in normal function be caught sooner rather than later and ensure that your gym or office is a safe space. It is through a proper institution of emotional intelligence practice that client outcomes improve.7

References:

Source

January 8, 2021

The Physiological Effects of Face Masks During Workouts

End Tidal Carbon Dioxide Level

Despite the gym closures and the inconsistencies in lockdowns, maintaining a healthy lifestyle is an important strategy in keeping yourself safe during the coronavirus pandemic1.

While social media chatter and opinion may disagree, the reality doesn’t change: the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends wearing a mask or cloth face-covering in public, especially in places where maintaining social distancing is difficult, and mass masking is a low cost, easy way to complement social distancing and other methods of controlling infection rates.

Research also shows that gyms are a source of viral transmission2, like many other public spaces, and that masking should be part of the exercise and workout experience. This is especially true when the activity is aerobic3.

Researchers at the Rambam Health Care Campus in Haifa, Israel, have looked into the physiological effects of face masks during exercise to assess the impact on the trainee.

They found that masking during aerobic training has minimal and statistically inconsistent impact on heart rate, respiratory rate, breathing and oxygen saturation in the blood.

However, using an N95 respirator did indicate an increase in EtCO2 (end tidal carbod dioxide) levels, a measure of carbox dioxide production and clearance in breathing. This increase could also be explained by the fact that exhaled air is being rebreathed when wearing a mask.

Granted, respiratory exposure to increased levels of carbon dioxide could impact performance, may cause headaches, confusion, stupors and increases in heart rates and breathing rates.

Short term exposure and intermittent exposure may also lead to improvements in respiratory muscle development and better performance.

The research doesn’t look at the impact of mask wearing from a psychological point of view and it is not a wide enough study to help draw any specific conclusions about specific populations because it was an all male subject group. So, it’s best not to generalize the results.

But, you can just stay out of the slipstream of anyone who is vigorously working out and keep your distance 4.

It used to be called an ounce of prevention which seems like a million years ago today, at a time when people are extremely polarized in their opinions about everything.

References

1. Epstein, D., Korytny, A., Isenberg, Y., Marcusohn, E., Zukermann, R., Bishop, B., Minha, S., Raz, A., & Miller, A. (2021). Return to training in the COVID-19 era: The physiological effects of face masks during exercise. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, 31(1), 70–75.

2. Gontjes, K. J., Gibson, K. E., Lansing, B., Cassone, M., & Mody, L. (2020). Contamination of Common Area and Rehabilitation Gym Environment with Multidrug-Resistant Organisms. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 68(3), 478–485.

3. Leung, N. H. L., Chu, D. K. W., Shiu, E. Y. C., Chan, K.-H., McDevitt, J. J., Hau, B. J. P., Yen, H.-L., Li, Y., Ip, D. K. M., Peiris, J. S. M., Seto, W.-H., Leung, G. M., Milton, D. K., & Cowling, B. J. (2020). Respiratory virus shedding in exhaled breath and efficacy of face masks. Nature Medicine, 26(5), 676–680.

4. Blocken, B., Malizia, F., van Druenen, T., & Marchal, T. (n.d.). Towards aerodynamically equivalent COVID19 1.5 m social distancing for walking and running. 12.

Source

November 16, 2020

The Perpetual COVID-19 Strength Plan

“Maximise the recruitment of high-threshold muscle fibers, increase strength, muscle, and volume using this advanced training tactic.”

With the Covid-19 situation still a series of openings and lockdowns around the world it means that gyms are open in some places, while in some countries they may have to wait a little longer.

I have been getting a lot of questions especially from my clientele who live in Melbourne, Australia, since they are still under severe lockdown and have no gym access available and are wanting to have a sure-fire gameplan ready for them once those restrictions are lifted.

In saying that, I thought it might be a great idea to share the game plan I would do if my goal was to get back much of the strength that may have been lost during lockdown, muscle coordination in key lifts and of course maximising my muscle growth.

Because let’s face it, building an aesthetically attractive and masculine physique is the goal of 99% of the male population.

Let me introduce you to the Cluster Set Method, while this method is not necessarily new I am often surprised at how little publicity this awesome method actually receives let alone how many coaches actually use or know how to use this method within their programming.

Now, being a male myself I do pride myself on having some sort of commendable strength related to my big lifts but my priority is and always will be about building an aesthetically attractive and masculine physique. Let me explain why I feel this method is necessary to kick-start your training coming out of lockdown.

Why the Custer Set Method

Whether you have just come out of lockdown or are still patiently waiting you most likely have been performing some sort of bodyweight, resistance banded or dumbbell-based training without any of the heavier more intense barbell work that you may have been normally performing in the gym.

While you may have been able to perform variants of exercises like the bench press, squat or deadlift and many others there will still be a degree of inefficiency in performing these lifts and expecting yourself to be where you were at before lockdown.

I know some of your may be in a hurry to build muscle and get back into shape but it’s been long established that muscle growth from a training program doesn’t actually happen for a while – it takes around 3-5 weeks before any substantial muscle growth will occur!

The first 2-3 weeks of any new program there will be a neuromuscular adaptation before any muscular adaptation (growth) will occur. So it makes even more sense to spend time getting this initial phase of training right so that once your body is primed you can take advantage of the muscle you may have not been able to build if you just went balls out from the get go.

Another reason why this method is a perfect starting point has to do with your ability to coordinate muscles within exercises as this is crucial to your ability to build muscle.

By performing lifts at a high enough level of intensity you can recruit high-threshold motor units which means you will be stimulating a higher number of muscle fibers within the muscle of that lift and in time will improve your muscles recruitment and coordination.

This means by simply stepping back in to the gym you are opening yourself up to a new stimulus that the body can adapt to and your motivation levels are going to be at an all-time high. The perfect time to take advantage of what you could consider as a potentiation phase that will set you up nicely before progressing into a more muscular hypertrophy specific plan of attack.

Understanding Cluster Sets

Firstly, it’s important to understand that the central nervous system is in charge of the recruitment of motor neurons, starting with the smaller motor units before the larger motor units.

This is known as the Henneman Size Principle. 1/p>

Remember I mentioned when lifting at a high enough level to recruit high-threshold motor units, all this means is that your body will recruit the smaller motor units and thus muscle fibers before it can recruit the larger muscle fibers so it is important to make sure you are truly lifting at the recommended percentage of your lifts which you will find in the subsequent sections below.

Now, cluster sets are when you perform a certain number of reps, rest a short amount of time, then perform the same amount of reps or slightly lower for a given amount of “intra-set clusters”.

By lifting at this high level of intensity it will expose you to greater amounts of volume being lifted at this intensity within a set.

What makes this even sweeter is when considering muscular hypertrophy, the intensity of which we lift plays a significant role from both a % of your 1RM and the proximity to momentary muscular failure.

So when we use cluster sets we have the intensity side taken care of and when we add the short rest periods between reps or ‘clusters’ your body has just enough time to replenish some energy (ATP) so you can continue lifting at that intensity.

The Perpetual COVID-19 Strength Plan - Fitness, Exercise, dumbbells, lower body, cluster training, basic strength, workout programming, upper body, cluster sets, pandemic, covid-19, muscle fiber recruitment

A key point to what I have just mentioned is to make sure you are lifting at a high enough level of intensity so it would be wise to have a solid understanding of your 1RM or even performing a strength test before beginning this method to further pinpoint your exact percentages and weight in which you will need to be lifting with.

In summary don’t use a weight that allows you to complete each cluster set too comfortably. This is going to go a long way in allowing you to become more neurologically efficient within the movements and your ability to recruit muscle fibers.

Cluster Method Workout Placement

I am sure you already have an idea with what exercises will be used and when to perform them but let’s quickly go over the basics. The primary exercises or ‘A series’ of your workout is where the cluster sets will be programmed.

The sets following the A series will be backed off in regards of intensity and situated within the functional hypertrophy (6-8 reps) & hypertrophy (9-12 reps) strength quality. The intent behind these exercises is to further fatigue each muscle group by focusing on maximum tension rather than load purely.

While the cluster set method can be used across the full spectrum of ranges, it’s predominantly known for being used with loading patterns of 1-5 reps per cluster.

For this program and for the purpose of maximising the recruitment of high-threshold motor units, we will be using the clusters within a 1-2 rep loading scheme.

How to Perform Cluster Sets

The general approach is to use a weight heavy enough to perform the target number of reps based off the first set. While there are many different variants in how to perform cluster sets this will also change the required percentage to lift with.

In our case we will be working off 90% of your 1RM, so the perfect approach would be to either already know your 1RM or to perform a strength test the week before you actually start in order to have a better handle on your percentages.

Let’s use the bench press for example. If my first set of clusters is 2-1-1-1 and I know I could maximally lift 150kg for 2 reps, I would then use 90% of that weight for my initial set of clusters.

The first cluster set would look like this:

  • 300 lbs (135 kg) for 2 reps (rest for 15 seconds)
  • 1 rep (rest for 15 seconds)
  • 1 rep (rest for 15 seconds)
  • 1 rep (rest for 180 seconds)

Now that our bases are covered, let’s dig into the rest of the program.

Programming Basics

Due to the high amount of intensity that will be lifted within each session, this will be a 4-day intensification phase rotating between a lower & upper body day focus that will last 4 weeks.

The lower body days will see the primary lifts rotated between a squatting & hip hinge movement pattern.

The upper body days will see a super set format used where there will be a shared focus between push/pull movement patterns in the horizontal & vertical planes.

As you move into each successive week, there will be 1 rep added into each cluster set, this will see you complete your final week of cluster sets for reps of 2-2-2-2.

  • Week One – 2-1-1-1
  • Week Two – 2-2-1-1
  • Week Three – 2-2-2-1
  • Week Four – 2-2-2-2

The exercises after your ‘A series’ are all about maintaining continuous tension. Inside your B & C series of exercises, it is important to use a weight that is heavy enough to complete the target rep range whilst also making sure you can maintain the required tempo.

Across the 4-week intensification phase, your upper body will see a total of 22-24 working sets per session, and the lower body will see a total of 17 working sets per session. This will set you up nicely for your next phase where I would suggest a 6-8 week muscle hypertrophy specific phase.

What Do You Mean By Tempo?

The tempo in which we lift within any given exercise is known as ‘Time Under Tension’ (TUT). This just refers to the 4 phases of lifting that are seen within each rep. (See image below)

The Perpetual COVID-19 Strength Plan - Fitness, Exercise, dumbbells, lower body, cluster training, basic strength, workout programming, upper body, cluster sets, pandemic, covid-19, muscle fiber recruitment

So if we use the bench press as an example and the tempo used in the above image of 4-2-1-0.

The 4, would see you lower the bar at a 4 second count.

The 2, would see you pause at the bottom isometric (hold) for 2 seconds.

The 1, would see you lift the weight back up in 1 second.

The 0, would see you have no hold at the top isometric.

As you will see below, I have actually also used the letter ‘X’ in the third column or concentric portion of the lift. This simply means that you need to emphasis lifting explosively.

The Workouts and Schedule

Below you will find the weekly schedule that will see you start with your week with the upper body. Due to intense nature of this program the lower body is always performed after the upper body day to allow any of the back muscles and the erector spinae that may be taxed to get enough rest in and not impede your ability to complete the upper body lifts.

Please know that an active rest day means to not just sit around all day. A simple daily step goal of 8,000-10,000 will do the trick.

Monday Upper Body 1
Tuesday Lower Body 1
Wednesday Active Rest day
Thursday Upper Body 2
Friday Lower Body 2
Saturday Active Rest Day
Sunday Rest day (take one full day off per week)
Upper Body 1 – Phase 1
Exercise Sets Reps Tempo Rest
A1. Neutral Grip Pull Up 6 2-1-1-1 40X0 90 seconds
A2. Flat DB Press Pronating 6 2-1-1-1 40X0 90 seconds
B1. Bent Over Single Arm Supported DB Row – Prone Grip 3 6-8 30X1 75 seconds
B2. Seated Single Arm DB Arnold Press 3 6-8 3020 75 seconds
C1. 60 Degree Incline DB Curl – Supinated 2 8-10 30X0 60 seconds
C2. Ez-Bar Triceps Extension 2 8-10 30X0 60 seconds
Lower Body 1 – Phase 1
Exercise Sets Reps Tempo Rest
A1. Trap Bar Deadlift 6 2-1-1-1 40X0 180 seconds
B1. DB Split Squat 4 6-8 40X0 75 seconds
B2. Prone Leg Curl – Plantarflexed 4 6-8 30X1 75 seconds
C1. BB Hip Thrust 3 8-10 3020 45 seconds
C2. Unilateral DB Farmers Walk – 25m each side 3 8-10 30X0 45 seconds
Upper Body 2 – Phase 1
Exercise Sets Reps Tempo Rest
A1. Incline Bench Press 6 2-1-1-1 40X0 90 seconds
A2. Barbell Bent Over Row – Prone Grip 6 2-1-1-1 40X0 90 seconds
B1. Flat DB Press – Neutral Grip 3 6-8 30X0 75 seconds
B2. Single Arm Lat Pulldown – Supinating 3 6-8 3011 75 seconds
C1. Cable Rope French Press 2 8-10 20X0 60 seconds
C2. Seated DB Hammer Curl 2 8-10 30X0 60 seconds
Lower Body 2 – Phase 1
Exercise Sets Reps Tempo Rest
A1. Safety Bar Back Squat 6 2-1-1-1 40X0 180 seconds
B1. DB FFE Split Squat 4 6-8 40X0 90 seconds
B2. Kneeling Leg Curl – Dorsiflexed 4 6-8 40X0 75 seconds
C1. 45 Degree Back Extension 3 8-10 30X2 75 seconds
C2. Cable Woodchop 3 12-14 30X0 60 seconds

Sports Nutrition Considerations

Seeing as though your performance will be of importance and to tolerate these higher intensities being lifted and overreaching nature, I would add in pre-workout 5g of creatine monohydrate alongside 5g of beta-alanine for further benefits in endurance performance and increase repetitions to failure.

However, if you don’t enjoy the tingling sensation known when using beta-alanine, you can also spread your dosages into 1-2g taken 3x throughout the day. 3, 4

Where to from here?

Once completing this phase of programming and IF your goal is to maximise muscle growth, I would highly recommend moving into a muscular hypertrophy specific plan of attack over the next 8-16 weeks depending on how much time you can commit to building muscle.

Whether you are an aspiring physique competitor or simply a physique enthusiast, this is the best plan of attack to follow after completing the cluster set method.

References

1. Culbertson, J. Y., Kreider, R. B., Greenwood, M., & Cooke, M. (2010). Effects of beta-alanine on muscle carnosine and exercise performance: A review of the current literature. Nutrients, 2(1), 75–98.

2. Kreider, R. B., Kalman, D. S., Antonio, J., Ziegenfuss, T. N., Wildman, R., Collins, R., Candow, D. G., Kleiner, S. M., Almada, A. L., & Lopez, H. L. (2017). International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Safety and efficacy of creatine supplementation in exercise, sport, and medicine. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 14(1), 18.

3. Milner-Brown, H. S., Stein, R. B., & Yemm, R. (1973). The orderly recruitment of human motor units during voluntary isometric contractions. The Journal of Physiology, 230(2), 359–370.

4. Robinson, R. (2009). In mammalian muscle, axonal wiring takes surprising paths. PLoS Biology, 7(2)

Source

« Newer Posts

Powered by WordPress