Kettlebells Workout

Have you ever been bored with your workouts?

If so, you’re not alone.

In fact, I’ve recently received a bunch of emails from folks saying one of their biggest stumbling blocks with getting results is that their workouts are repetitive .

Let’s discuss 3 Strategies You Can Use to AVOID This Trap.

[1] The Reframe:

When I do a workout (or a “training session” as I typically call them), I’m never focused on being entertained.

I’m ALWAYS zeroed in on my goal.

That is -

What is the PURPOSE of my training?

What achievement do I want to obtain ?

I’m not looking to be entertained.

“Entertainment” is a completely distinct category - a whole ‘nother box that gets checked.

So, when I’m raising bells overhead, or squatting, or whatever…

I’m ALWAYS thinking about the goal.

Then, I’m focused on that process -

Feel of each rep…

Managing fatigue…

Body position…

And adjusting accordingly when necessary.

Then I log my work in my training journal so I can see what I’ve completed and look back on my work so I can measure progress and setbacks - to see what was effective or not.

So that makes the process easy .

It’s kinda like following a recipe.

No one ever gets bored of following the recipe to bake chocolate chip cookies.

They’re focused on the mouth-watering chocolatey gooey goodness they're about to enjoy.

So, reframe - look at the reason you train - from another perspective.

Think “OUTCOME” NOT Entertainment.

From my coaching experience, this is THE MOST ESSENTIAL way to view your training and to avoid “being bored.”

[2] Variation vs. Variety:

Most people bounce from workout to workout to “ keep things interesting” or

“ confuse their muscles ”...

You know, “ change it around .”

Part of this is because of #1 - boredom.

But the other part is a common myth - the mistaken belief that variety is necessary to create an adaptation.

(Many times we can trace it back to P90X and “muscle confusion.”)

That's actually far from reality .

For example, legendary guitarist Eddie Van Halen, started playing the piano at age 6. He then moved to the drums. Played a short stint on the bass. Then he finally moved on to the guitar.

The result?

Voted #1 in a Guitar World Magazine poll for "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time" poll.

Ranked #4 in Rolling Stone’s 2023 list of the "250 Greatest Guitarists of All Time."

And “Eruption,” my favorite guitar solo of all time and voted number 2 in Guitar World's readers poll of the "100 Greatest Guitar Solos".

Eddie didn’t play the same song all the time. He played different chords and notes - blended uniquely - and made them his own.

Likewise, you can still use the same 2, 3, or even 5 exercises, but change your:

Load - lighter (GASP!)

Sets - fewer or greater

Reps - fewer or more

Rest periods - short, medium, long

Training frequency - 2,3,4,5 even 6x a week

This is called “variation”.

[3] Specialized Variety:

This is arguably one of my preferred approaches .

Simply put, it’s using alternatives of the same exercise.

In his book, A System of Multi-Year Training In Weightlifting, World Champion Coach and lifter A.S. Medvedyev details over 100 different exercise variations for the click here Snatch, the Clean, and the Jerk.

Examples:

Power Snatch

Power Snatch from above knee

Power Snatch from below the knee

Power Snatch from hip

Power Snatch from plinths

Power Snatch without the hook grip

Power Snatch on box

You get the idea .

For your KB work, you can do the below :

Clean

Clean from dead stop

Clean from dead stop beneath the body

Bottoms Up Clean

Clean outside the legs

Press

Press with a pause at the sticking point

Press with 2 pauses – sticking point and lockout

Bottoms Up Press

Push Press with a drop to rack

Push Press with slow negative

Push Press with active negative

Again, you see the point .

Apply these three approaches to your KB workouts – ahem – routines – and you’ll never have to worry about being bored again.

Stay Strong,

Geoff Neupert.

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