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February 20, 2021

The Njoie Nforce Percussion Massage Gun

The Njoie (pronounced enjoy) Nforce massage gun is a lightweight percussion massage gun that uses short duration staccato bursts of gentle hammering to get into your soft tissue.

Does it help recovery? I couldn’t say objectively, but it does feel good and it is relaxing. And that may be all it needs to be. If you need some science to help you out there’s this: To Compare the Effect of Vibration Therapy and Massage in Prevention of Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS).

But there isn’t much research on percussion massage guns specifically. I was skeptical at first because they are not cheap, and they are called guns that you have to point at yourself and trigger.

How Percussion Massage Guns Work

At the top of the range for percussion massage guns, like the $599 Theragun Pro, have some serious specs: 60 lbs of force, 16 mm amplitude, Bluetooth, OLED screen, and wireless charging.

And if you are paying six hundred dollars to get pummeled you do need to consider the specifications. You want over 40 lbs of force so that you can apply more pressure and not stop the massager from working because it stalls.

You want higher amplitudes, 16 mm being the top of the range, because that is the amount the head of the massager moves out and you need higher amplitudes for deeper massages.

You also want speed, how fast the massage head moves, with the mid-range of speeds being about 2,500 RPM. In that regard, the Njoie Nforce hits the mark. And it squeezes in under $100.

That goes a long way to making up for its lack fo muscular specifications to compare with the big boys. I guess the only way you’d know the difference in performance is if you have devices at both ends of the spectrum to compare directly on your skin.

5 Levels Benefit
1900 RPM Relaxation
2300 RPM Waking up muscles
2700 RPM Decomposing lactic acid
3100 RPM Improving blood circulation
3500 RPM Relieving deep tension

Good Vibrations, ROM and DOMs

The Njoie Nforce Percussion Massage Gun - Reviews, relief, flexibility, massage therapy, tension, percussive massage, massage gun, deep tissue massage

The benefits of massage are tangbile for everyone from hardcore lifters to casual users. The premise of massage is that it moves muscles and tissues around, releases toxins by creating better circulation, throughput of oxygen and overall release of tension and stress.

It can help loosen you up after a heavy lifting session and keep you flexibile. It can help you sleep better which anyone who has ever had a massage session in a spa can attest to.

I can say, unequivocally, that everyone in my family fights over using the Nforce at nights and that it’s pretty cool to pummel yourself with it before you go to bed.

Just the vibrations across your skin are enough to relax you. Still, you have to be careful to keep the gun away from your neck or sensitive parts of your body. Maneuvering it on your own can be challenging unless you have expertise as a contortionist.

It builds grip strength, though, especially at higher RPMs. And if all it does is give you a sense of relaxation then it’s worth the hundred bucks you pay for it. That’s probably no more than one professional massage session in a spa worth of cost.

Which brings me to my ultimate recommendation for the Njoie Nforce: you get what you pay for. This is an entry level product or a low-cost alternative to more powerful percussion massage guns.

The experience is enjoyable on a casual basis but if you are someone who sees a massage gun as a component of your training and recovery then you might want to consider something more powerful.

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January 25, 2021

The Push Press To Save Your Shoulders

There aren’t many quick and dynamic exercises that I’d recommend everyone learn and practice. But the landmine push press is something I’d suggest for almost anyone.

Once I’ve taught someone what I call the foundation movements that teach skill and body control related to every type of movement and exercise, I’ll pick movements that are best for them given their ability, background, and focus on physical fitness.

If you instill these foundation movements firmly from the start, learning more complex athletic movement and exercises becomes more intuitive.

If you want to understand these movements and the principles behind learning them with this particular strategy, I’m offering a comprehensive course teaching the why and how. If you live in or around New York City, you can sign up and learn in person at my gym JDI Barbell or run through the entire program online.

Once I help my clients build a bedrock without holes, I choose exercises that are easy to process and progress quickly. It’s different for everyone, but I do like to see everyone practice a couple of exercises.

One of these is the push press. I’ve raised a few eyebrows by saying this.

What Is the Push Press

The push press is thought of as a secondary lift for Olympic weightlifting. I haven’t exactly been quiet about my opinion that Olympic weightlifting movements are best left alone unless you specifically want to dedicate time to that practice.

I have some clients who do a traditional barbell push press, but with others, I prefer to have them use kettlebells or dumbbells to build more stability or mobility.

The best version for field athletes, beginners to weight training, or those with restrictions, is the landmine push press.

Why Do the Landmine Push Press?

When you learn the push press, you learn how you can and should move in one coordinated athletic effort to move something heavy.

To do this right:

  • It will help if you create stiffness in your entire trunk to deliver the force created from your lower body, as it pushes into the ground, to your upper body, and then, to hoist the load sitting on your shoulders overhead.
  • You need to maintain balance and pressure through your feet to complete this quick jumping action with enough force and accuracy to push the bar overhead in the right direction.

But pushing weights directly overhead can sometimes do more harm than good.

Some athletes can’t stress their shoulders in this position if they want to stay healthy and strong for their sport, and some of the rest are just trying to be strong and fit and need to work out flexibility limitations first.

The landmine push press works around all this.

Pushing at an angle puts the shoulder and elbow in a position that can still train a more vertical pushing pattern without the same stress and flexibility demands on the shoulder.

Who Should Do the Push Press?

If you have had shoulder pain when pressing overhead because of an old injury or just from inactivity, the landmine push press is the perfect tool.

While you should keep working to recover the shoulder complex’s full dexterity, training for physical balance means you need to build athletic strength in pushing movements besides the bench press.

As you rebuild and push weight directly overhead, which indicates you again have your full natural mobility and stability in every movement direction, you will still improve strength and ability with this exercise.

Do both until you’re ready for the traditional push press, and continue doing them as a variation to continue building shoulder health and strength.

What Does the Push Press Do For You?

Just doing a strict landmine press builds a good deal of strength with total stability.

The upper-back muscles that control scapular movement and the shoulder’s stabilizing muscles are called to keep the barbell’s path straight.

This is especially true because you’re only holding the end of the barbell in this exercise.

As you press, it’s free to move in every direction, and it isn’t easy to keep in place. So those stabilizing muscles really have to do their job. You also need to create just as much stability from your trunk to get the shoulder to maintain the movement’s integrity and push the weight.

When you add the push press’s dynamic leg drive, you learn to produce stability and strength quicker and more efficiently because the movement is quick and explosive.

Turning a strict upper-body focused press into a full-body push also makes it possible to load yourself heavier overhead.

The weight that may be too heavy to press just from the shoulders can be heaved overhead with the momentum created from your legs extending and quickly locked out.

All of the upper back and shoulder supporting musculatures can then learn new static stability, strength levels, and improved coordination.

How Do You Do the Landmine Press?

If you can find a landmine press holder, that’s great. If you can’t, it doesn’t matter all that much. You can wedge it in any corner where it won’t cause damage or set it up as I do here:

The Push Press To Save Your Shoulders - Fitness, fitness, olympic weightlifting, Push press, flexibility, functional movement, shoulder injury, online training, shoulder mobility, trunk flexion, push jerk, upper back, shoulder health, core stability, landmine press

  • Load the bar, pick up the bar by the head (the end of the sleeve where you load the weight), and cup both your hands.
  • Place the head of the bar almost directly in your sternum.
  • Place your feet somewhere between hip and shoulder-width apart and flair your toes out.
  • Brace and dip your knees to a similar position as you would if you were trying to jump as high as possible, but make sure that your knees track out toward your toes and your hips come slightly back without letting your chest fall forward.
  • Keep your balance on your midfoot and keep your chest tall, fighting all urges to shift your weight all towards your heels, or let your chest cave, or round your upper back.
  • While keeping the bar’s head in your chest, drive hard through your legs, pushing both feet into the ground.
  • Explosively extend your knees as you would for a jump, still making sure you’re pushing through the whole foot of both legs.
  • As you come upon the balls of your feet from this explosive drive, shrug your shoulders. The barbell should fly off your chest a little.
  • Without hesitation, keep your shoulders shrugged and quickly extend your elbows pushing the bar at a 45-degree angle (almost at the crown of your head).
  • Try to time the end lockout of your elbows to happen at the very same time your heels touch back down to the floor.

The Push Press To Save Your Shoulders - Fitness, fitness, olympic weightlifting, Push press, flexibility, functional movement, shoulder injury, online training, shoulder mobility, trunk flexion, push jerk, upper back, shoulder health, core stability, landmine press

The Push Press To Save Your Shoulders - Fitness, fitness, olympic weightlifting, Push press, flexibility, functional movement, shoulder injury, online training, shoulder mobility, trunk flexion, push jerk, upper back, shoulder health, core stability, landmine press

What Are Your Options?

I prefer the landmine push press with two arms because of how much you can overload yourself with it, but single arm variations can be better for some people.

If you really need to recover balance in the body or work on single-side strength and stability to improve a nagging injury or reduce some glaring asymmetry, the single-arm landmine push is one of the best and safest ways to accomplish it.

Just place the head of the bar in one hand directly at the head of your shoulder and do the exercise the same way you would with two hands.

Both the single and double arm variations of this exercise are great at building strength with less risk.

The scapula moves in a position along the rib cage that keeps it in a more anatomically strong and stable position when you press with a neutral grip (thumbs facing up).

The angle at which you push the bar fixes you in a position where you can’t contort your body to grind through a rep that you really shouldn’t.

You either lockout smoothly or not at all.

However, you should do these over some matted area so that if you do fail a rep, you won’t hesitate to let the bar drop in front of you instead of lowering it in a bad position.

If someone hurts themselves doing this exercise, they most likely did so when lowering the bar back to the ground.

You can stay braced and squat to lower it to drop it at waist height with matting underneath.

When You’re Ready for the Challenge

Learning the timing for the push press is challenging, and it develops athletic ability. Transitioning to a push jerk can test you further.

The push press and push jerk are similar with one difference.

In the push jerk, you lock your arms out and receive the bar with your legs bent in a quarter squat.

The timing of the dip and drive is the same, but instead of ending with your legs straight and standing fully as you do in the push press, you use the weight to push you back into a quarter squat, then, stand from there, having already received the weight supported with locked elbows.

Not only is this going to challenge your speed of movement and coordination, but it will also let you handle heavier weights and build even higher levels of total body strength.

It cannot be easy to learn if you’ve never practiced it, but if you understand the basic principles of stability and balance, it just needs a little practice.

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January 4, 2021

How to Learn a Handstand and Fall Less

It’s important to know what you want from your handstand journey. The majority of us aren’t gymnasts or professional hand-balancers, so we don’t have to have a perfect handstand, whatever that is.

With social media, we can often feel disheartened because we are exposed to the very best, whose job is to have a certain handstand.

There is no competition or judges for the regular person; you are only training for yourself.

This article is for people who want to improve their kick up consistency, which means kicking up into a handstand and holding it most of the time. I know from personal experience, it’s frustrating to waste energy constantly falling and not actually holding a handstand.

It’s important to be comfortable on your hands so that you can make cool moves such as:

I call this a journey because it is. You can have the best training one day, then the next day nothing goes right.

It doesn’t matter how experienced you are. There will still be bad days. You will get better at reading your body and adjusting.

Prepare Your Wrist

I’ve discovered during my personal training career that the majority of people have weak wrists. Don’t be discouraged if this is you, but you must accept where you are. We live in a beautiful society, but it has its disadvantages, one of them is we never use our wrists.

We don’t hang, crawl, or apply pressure to them (typing on the laptop doesn’t count).

Remember, the body is efficient. Use it, or lose it. This goes for physical, technical, and mental skills.

When I used to teach big classes, I quickly realized that if I had 2-3 exercises that involved a little pressure on the wrist, the groans I heard weren’t from physical exertion but wrist pain.

When you start training your wrist, it only takes a few weeks to see improvements. How do you strengthen the wrists?

Build habits in your daily life because just doing one or two days a week is not enough, even if it’s for an hour.

I love this Bruce Lee quote:

How to Learn a Handstand and Fall Less - Fitness, balance ability, endurance, core, alignment, flexibility, handstand, handstand walking, handstand push up, press to handstand, wrist pain, shoulder mobility, neuromuscular, pike, Spatial Ability

It takes 5-15 minutes daily to get the best results or spread it throughout the day by building cues or reminders.

For example, every day before you eat or after a shower, do a set or set a timer, anything to make it convenient for yourself by incorporating it into your life.

The majority of the day is spent making habits we’ve built. It’s not a habit when it takes too much energy and willpower.

What if you don’t get wrist pain?

Wrist work is still needed.

You have to realize that handstands aren’t a natural position.

Your ankles are designed to support your full weight and gravity, but our small wrists aren’t.

That’s why strengthening the wrists, fingers, and forearms are important, and also, the elbows and shoulders.

Progress in handstands and calisthenics is determined by how strong your joints and tendons become because these small areas have to withstand the load and force passing through them.

You can find more mobility routines here Prehab/ Rehab for:

So before you go upside down, spend a week or two getting the joints ready.

When you get into handstands against the wall, there is bound to be some discomfort in the wrists (they will get stronger and adjust), but it shouldn’t be painful.

Babies Do It Every Day

There’s no perfect handstand program, but you’ll hear athletes/coaches saying their way is the best, and neither am I saying my way is the right way.

I’m sharing how I’ve taught myself and clients to balance on their hands. Everyone is different, and we all learn differently. That’s what makes the world go round.

Two components will make the difference regardless of what program or training style you apply.

The First Component Is Consistency

We hear this word all the time because, without it, there is no success. It doesn’t matter how great your training session might have been.

Training something once a week will do nothing.

You will not build the neural adaptation and spatial awareness to master the handstand.

When babies are learning how to walk/stand, they do it every day. They have the desire and curiosity to step into the unknown, learn, and adapt. That’s the kind of mindset you want to have.

You don’t have to spend hours every day, but make it a habit of being upside down. Those pockets of time when you’re bored or doing menial tasks, practice your handstand instead. Five minutes is all you need.

Heck, one set daily will do the job.

This is In addition to 2-3 training sessions (about 1 hour) a week to practice various drills and weak areas.

The Second Component Is Time on Your Hands

The second component is the actual time you spend balancing on your hands. Failing to kick up and hold the handstand can be a part of your training, but please, not the whole hour. It teaches you very little.

You need to get the most out of your training. You actually want to feel what it’s like to bear weight on your hands, shifting your center of mass and how your hands are constantly making small adjustments.

Do exercises on the wall or close to the wall, and that way, if you fall, you have support.

Some people can only hold a handstand in one particular position. I’m not talking about creating shapes with your legs because their area of influence is poor:

This could be that they’ve never actually spent time in those positions. How can you adjust if you don’t know what position your body is in?

Spend some time in a:

  • Banana handstand (arched back)
  • In a pike (are your glutes too tight, hands uneven?)

When you know what not to do, then you can correct it.

  • When I was learning the handstand, I was obsessed with being in a straight line. Otherwise, it didn’t count.
  • I would abort the handstand if I knew I wasn’t straight.
  • This resulted in me not actually being able to navigate or adjust while being on my hands.
  • My kick up was poor, and I didn’t understand what was going on.
  • Then I started focusing on my hands, shoulders, and hips.

I would kick up, and whatever position my body was in, I would try and hold it.

Babies will try all different things, spending ten seconds here, then falling, another ten seconds there, and then falling.

That’s similar to a handstand journey, spend ten seconds freestanding, another 30 seconds doing a drill on the wall. Gather those valuable seconds on your hands. By doing them frequently, you will progress.

Guidelines

Don’t overcomplicate it, be consistent, and actually spend time on your hands.

Here’s a training template you can work off and adapt.

  • Choose exercises to focus on the areas I’ve outlined.
  • Most of the exercises you will do as a superset.
  • A superset is when you perform one set of an exercise (B1) and then immediately switch to another exercise (B2).

You can rest when you have completed the set.

Handstand Session Template

How to Learn a Handstand and Fall Less - Fitness, balance ability, endurance, core, alignment, flexibility, handstand, handstand walking, handstand push up, press to handstand, wrist pain, shoulder mobility, neuromuscular, pike, Spatial Ability

Training sessions can be structured like this, or they can be irregular play.

You can change the exercises you do every month, week, or session by session.

Doing stretches during your session is good to loosen the muscles and to calm your breathing. The more relaxed you are, the better your handstands will be.

You can find a beginner handstand program here Handstand 0-60.

Flexibility and handstands go hand in hand because being able to stack your feet, hips, and shoulders on top of your hands help make handstands less draining.

Without shoulder flexibility (+180° overhead straight arm raise or backend), your wrists and forearms will take most of the load. These areas fatigue quickly under your weight.

It is much better to let the shoulder take most of the load, just like your hips do for your lower body.

Without hamstring flexibility, a forward fold, or the pancake stretch, you will be unable to control your kick up, and you will find it hard to have your legs straight in a handstand.

You can train your flexibility together or separately from your handstands.

There’s No Perfect Handstand

There’s no perfect handstand. There’s just the desire and curiosity to step into the unknown, learn, and adapt.

Spend five minutes a day on your hands and train 2-3 times a week, working on drills to improve your balance, endurance and kick up consistency.

You can always improve your alignment along the way. Take care of your joints because they will determine how far you can advance.

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November 30, 2020

How to Start Calisthenics Training

With the amount of information we’re exposed to, it”s easy to overcomplicate our training. When it comes to calisthenics, it appears to look unsafe because we see the end product from the best athletes, but calisthenics is for all levels.

There are various forms of calisthenics/bodyweight training that you can do, based on your goals.

It’s important to keep things simple. You need to ask yourself this question “Does my training match my goals?” I see many times that people aren’t training specifically for the goals they want.

They say they want apples, yet they are planting orange trees.

This article is meant to simplify calisthenics training, guide you from beginner to advanced, and show you how all levels can use the body as a paintbrush to create a masterpiece.

General Strength- Beginner to Intermediate

I know the temptation to advance as quickly as possible is significant, but it will only lead to injuries, massive weakness, burnout, and frustration.

If you haven’t done this style of training before, then start with the basics. Work on the big six:

  1. Pullups
  2. Dips
  3. Rows
  4. Pushups
  5. Handstands
  6. L-sit

These are the pillars of calisthenics training because they cover the muscle groups used in many advanced skills. Do this for 3-6 months.

It may seem long, but it is the quickest way to advance.

If you skip this vital stage in your development, you’ll still have to come back to it because the chinks in your armor will show, and progress will be slow.

During this phase, the aim is to learn your first pullup.

For example, get comfortable with doing 12 + reps. As you progress, begin implementing different variations of these moves in the free beginner calisthenics program, Bodyweight Strong.

Use this time to improve your mobility and flexibility so that it won’t restrict you later.

Keep in mind less is more. More time in the gym and more days of training will not make for better results.

As a beginner, train 2-4 days a week. One hour per session is enough time to put in good, quality work while allowing adequate time for your body to recover.

Specific Strength- Intermediate to Advanced

This is when you start to focus on specific goals like static skills, freestyling, and rings.

Choose 2-3 goals to focus on:

It really depends on what you want and where you want to take your training.

Design your program in 4-8 week blocks, with your overall training 3-6 days per week.

Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
High Intensity Low Intensity High Intensity Low Intensity High Intensity Rest Rest
Pulling Strength Handstand Balance Grip Pulling Strength Handstand Balance Core Pulling Strength    

For example, if your goal is the muscle-up and handstand pushups, each exercise you choose for your program should improve some aspect towards reaching those specific goals.

I see too many people trying to cover every movement pattern and work on every weakness.

Less is more. You can always change your focus in the next program.

Build Strength

The word strength is used too loosely in fitness, so let’s define it. When I mention strength, I refer to absolute strength as 1 rep max and maximal strength (85% to 90% of 1 RM).

The stronger you are, the more calisthenics skills you can do.

Understand that your body has three energy systems that it uses independently or simultaneously to contract your muscles.

  1. Creatine phosphate lasts 1-12 seconds and is used for high intensity and demanding tasks such as heavyweight or difficult bodyweight exercises that you can only do for low reps.
  2. The glycolysis and oxidative system are used for muscle building, conditioning, and endurance.
  3. The anaerobic system lasts for 10 seconds – 2 minutes. The aerobic system is low intensity and lasts for a long time. This is your endurance training or for daily tasks.

How to Start Calisthenics Training - Fitness, 1 rep max, Training, endurance training, bodyweight exercise, calisthenics, mobility, flexibility, rings, handstand, energy systems, static balance, pullups, handstand push up, rows, l-sit, hand strength, bodyweight workout

Strength training is taxing on the nervous system, requiring a minimum of 24 hours to recover between strength sessions.

  • Train 2-4 days per week.
  • Training your absolute strength to failure should be used sparingly to test your current level or gain that motivational boost.
  • You cannot train like this all the time because your nervous system will not recover between sessions, and it will ruin your progress.
  • Instead, train your maximal strength leaving 1 rep in reserve. If you know/ think that you can do 3 reps of an exercise max (e.g., muscle-ups), do 2 reps for all your sets.
  • This builds strength while not overtaxing the nervous system.
  • Train high sets in the 4-8 and 1-5 rep range.
  • For isometrics (during contraction, the muscles don’t noticeably change the length, and the affected joints don’t move), 1-12s.
  • Eccentrics (contraction caused by the muscle’s lengthening) 1-5 reps, each rep 7 seconds long.

Remember, if you feel the pump or burn in your muscles, you’re no longer training strength.

Build Muscle

Run from anyone who says, “You can’t build muscle with calisthenics.”

Your muscles don’t know the difference between bodyweight exercises, weights, or a table.

It can’t identify whether you’re picking up a 6 kg, 20 kg dumbbell, or bodyweight. Your body feels the resistance, intensity, and how taxing a movement is.

How does the training look? A rep range of 6-12 reps (working at 65-85% of 1 rep max) is the most effective way to stimulate muscle growth.

Instead of increasing the weight, you increase the difficulty of the bodyweight exercises.

Choose exercises that are challenging to you in this rep range.

When pullups become easy, do a harder variation such as close-grip pullups. Utilize the same muscle-building techniques you would with weights such as mechanical tension, eccentric damage, metabolic stress, push-pull splits, or drop sets.

The current culture wants to create a rivalry between calisthenics and weights when the reality is you can use both.

Gymnastics is a bodyweight sport, and they utilize weights in their training.

Many sports, football, basketball, athletics, use weights to improve performance, calisthenics is the same.

  • Doing weighted calisthenics, such as weighted pull-ups and weighted dips, is a great way to build strength and muscle.
  • Bodyweight exercises and weights are great for training compound movements (multiple muscle groups and joints).
  • There’s a wide variety of isolation exercises (multiple muscle groups and one joint). With isolation exercise, you can target certain muscles, which is great for improving aesthetics.

The lower-body is naturally powerful, so bodyweight training can only go so far. That’s why weighted squats, deadlifts, hip thrusts are excellent for building muscle.

Match Training to Goals

I always say there’s no perfect way to train. It depends on your abilities and goals.

Make sure your training matches your goals, and train specifically with them in mind.

Train like a powerlifter if you want to do those advanced calisthenics skills.

Train like a bodybuilder if you want to be in the best shape of your life.

Train like an athlete if you want to be crazy fit or do freestyling.

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