trx rip

STPro Rehab for Sports & Service Personnel

Changing of the Guard


Image: Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 263 (Reinforced)

Nickname: “Thunder Chickens” Motto: Balanced Excellence (Pondera Virtus)

Mission: “Provide the United States with a forward-deployed, amphibious force-in-readiness capable of executing mission across the full spectrum of combat and military operations other than war.”

studiotpro_color

Inspiration for this post:  Spreading awareness of the most profoundly important thing to know about managing your own rehab: the body goes into GUARDING mode.   Guarding is an identifiable and testable pattern of altered muscle recruitment patterns as result of an injury.  During guarding mode, the body’s deep sub-processes adapt and alter existing movement strategies.  This allows for recovery.  However, these adaptive survival strategies tend to persist even after the injury has healed.   A classic example is an ankle injury.  The entire kinetic chain adapts by shifting weight away from the injured side to the “good-side”.  This alters every muscle recruitment pattern stored in the body.  Generally, we like to get back to business as soon as the ankle has healed, but the body has defense mechanisms that may tend to make us “hedge” a bit in weight bearing again on the side with the injury… and these hedging strategies generally lead to more problems.  

Immediate Stage 1 recovery strategies typically restore micro-strategies – such as joint function.   Stage 1 exercises generally are very specific such as pushing a cup across a table and can involve eg0-destroying exercises with therabands and Bosu balls.  These are necessary, but not sufficient to reintegrate the healed component back into the kinetic chain.  After the Stage 1 healing, it is necessary to “update” the kinetic chain’s muscle memory and recruitment patterns to restore a balanced state of readiness.  This kinetic chain reintegration allows healthy full-body restoration – meaning – getting unstuck from the injury once and for all.  

We tend to hope and expect  that once a joint or soft tissue has recovered, that the rest of the kinetic chain will  automatically recognize the healed area and go back to “normal”.   But it doesn’t happen this way.  A Stage 2 recovery process is necessary to allow the kinetic chain to regain confidence in the joint and adapt or rebuild muscle recruitment patterns, re-calibrate balancing strategies and convert strength into readiness.  We can do this ourselves or with a sports PT.  This post focuses on how to do this ourselves – or – make your sports PT’s job easier by recognizing the process (and doing what they say, ha ha).  Stage 2 does not mean “take it easy” – Stage 2 means we need to go back to Basic Training Days.  More dues paying? Yes. Sorry ego: it is what it is.


 

The body is a team effort.  Deep in systems we can measure but still do not understand, the body neurologically monitors and tracks all movement based on its calculations.  Even thoughts trigger electrical responses in deep core systems that precipitate action.  Our bodies run constant lightning speed system checks.  Signals fire in individual system components and our integrated kinetic chain executes based on its status calculations.

Our brains and bodies become specialists with practice and repetition, but like the Thunder Chickens, the human body is designed for a full spectrum of readiness.  Our bodies work for “balanced excellence” – even if component parts are injured or recovering.  For athletes and active individuals, our bodies are constantly calculating and preparing for readiness.   And we like it that way.

camp lejuenue
Camp Lejeune, NC.  STPro likes this sign not only out of Respect, but also, because growing up, it meant we were almost at the beach.

 

The body knows it is injured.  It’s funny in a way, that it takes teams of experts and technicians to reveal what the body already knows.  When one part of system goes boom, the rest of the system adapts.  Thinking of the body as an integrated team of components, during injury of a specific team member, our guarding systems send signals to rest of the team: MAN DOWN.  Adjacent systems compensate – anybody near it that could hurt it, TURNS OFF.  Anybody in the vicinity that can compensate – COMPENSATES.   Team members even far away in the extremities (toes and fingers included) – ADAPT.  Meanwhile, the neurological system invents and tests entirely new adaptive patterns to drive the machine bearing loads and executing movement against gravity.  We are deeply wired with an ingenious survival strategy.  We are designed to SURVIVE first – and be perfect later.

ch-53E super stallion marines camp lejeune
960508-M-7232C-012 U.S. Marines from the 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines, storm out of a CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter during a simulated Tactical Recovery of Aircraft and Personnel Mission as part of a Revised Capabilities Exercise at Camp Lejeune, N.C., on May 8, 1996. DoD photo by Lance Cpl. C.D. Clark, U.S. Marine Corps.

 

Don’t believe you’re wired to survive, even in spite of yourself?  See if you can jump off the ski lift… you will have a weird feeling of not being able to jump.  That is our deep instincts keeping us alive in spite of ourselves.

airborne jumps camp lejenue
Monthly airborne jumps, Camp Lejeune.

GUARDING DEFINITION – YOUR BODY HAS MPS

ARMY MP STUBBORN

 

During injury and even through our Stage 1 and Stage 2 healing, the nervous system calls out the MPs. The MPs do their job on orders from High Command Survival Instincts.  They stay on point even during Stage 2 recovery.  In practical terms, we have to go back through a lot of Basic Training (Re-Training) maneuvers to convince the MPs that we can safely reintegrate the restored injured component into our muscle recruitment strategies used to manage the entire kinetic chain.  They are not a reasonable bunch to deal with – they answer to a higher command even than our force of will alone: the High Command of Survival.

High Command Survival Orders to the MPs:

Do not let this person do anything to re-injure themselves.  They have their orders. They are trained and fearless gatekeepers and will without questioning orders,  de-activate muscles, muscle groups and even half your dang body if they decide it will help you survive.

They will shut you down.  If they decide that essential functions such as the spine are being threatened – they will shut you down by diverting prime movers into stabilizers.  In other words, they call out a massive muscle spasm, and you have to lie down.  Like now.

They deny access.  They block the gates and deny access to movements that could threaten the injury.  Often these are essential core support and stabilizing systems.  Especially when the spine is threatened – they are willing to hold the line with a complete mobility lockdown and stiffness of every available muscle and tendon available.

They will disrupt the kinetic chain.   Since childhood we have been building neural patterns for complex movements, load-bearing, stride, force loads, skill etc.  The MPs are not interested in what you did back in the day.  Those strategies are disrupted no matter what the cognitive will commands.

 


 

THE MPS HAVE TACTICS AT THEIR DISPOSAL

MP STUBBORN

 

During Stage 2, when getting back into a normal routine, the MPs are still watching.  This period can get pretty tricky.  Those guarding patterns are still in working muscle memory.  The MPs are still on high alert – and attempts to use sheer force of will to outrun them are generally met with little success.  This makes Stage 2 tricky business, for the individual and the trainer.   With attempts to push it too hard in Stage 2… at the first sign of uncertainty, the body can go back into full-blown guarding.  This can be frustrating – and while we may try to negotiate with the MPs, even cheat, avoid rest days, grunt-smash-and-push-onwards anyway…


 

 THE MPS DO NOT LISTEN TO YOUR APPEALS, PLEAS, NEGOTIATION TACTICS AND FLAT-OUT BEGS FOR MERCY

MP NOT INTERESTED

 

While it might be helpful from an adaptation perspective, for the MPs to be less restrictive – they will not naturally restore a full kinetic chain to wellness by directive from force of will.  They are not interested in the commands that come from the cognitive mind anymore.   They want proof in action and with quality repetition of functional integrated movement (think of it as your “papers” to pass).  Yelling, grunting, smashing, threatening, pushing-through anyway, complaining, whining and begging forgiveness fall on deaf ears.

So what do we do to satisfy the MPs?

We get Primal.  Go back to Basic Training.  Revisit our survival skills…


GET PRIMAL – AGAIN AND AGAIN UNTIL IT STICKS

MP PRIMAL

 

Effective kinetic chain reintegration strategies go back to our early beginnings.  We learn to resist gravity and stand by first crawling.  Skipping the math here – essentially – going back to basics gets “underneath” the guarding patterns used to protect the injury.   This approach uses our instinctive and inherent processes within our own body to re-integrate our kinetic chain.  Sorry Bosu ball – that was Stage 1.  We are back in Basic Training now.  The body likes to move with ground force reaction, momentum and force.

Getting primal starts with both arms and legs on the ground.  See the Army Crawl above… now watch a child pre-walking.  Same moves.  These Basic Training moves run that deep.  Our body has not forgotten how to rebuild muscle memory patterns.   And the MPs generally tend to allow these moves as long as we keep the Basic Training mindset.  In Zen, this is called Beginner Mind.  Forget everything you knew about how you “used to move” – get low, crawl around and embrace the suck. Don’t try to “force it” – instead – adapt a mindset of building, testing and re-testing your limits.  This will keep the MPs from getting upset and shutting off systems.  Overdo it — and they show no mercy.  Hello comfy couch and Netflix binge.

Ground based maneuvers include the following moves:

 

The Beginning – Get Low and Start Safe with Basics

Front, back, side planks, push-ups.  Pay attention.  Do not smash or grind – really work on the form here – the MPs are not counting reps.  The MPs want QUALITY. Also, ground based planks, while boring and dull, are safe.  This keeps the MPs from getting upset and shutting off systems.

dadandson
Father With Son Doing Pushups

 

 

Start Moving

Quickly progressing back to movement is the essential next step.  Simple moves such as Bear Crawl, Crab Walk, Army Crawl, moving Push-up variations such as tricep pop-ups, Kong Vaults and even the hideous Fit Ball Crunches – all link back to the primal systems bodies used to learn to calibrate our movement against gravity.   The key: hands or elbows and either feet or knees are used in coordinated fashion touching something solid like the ground or a wall.

 

Things May Be Going Well & The MPs Call a Time-out – They Can Even Shut Off the Core

There is an essential test for core activation used by sports PTs and is also common in gymnastics: the Quadruped Test, aka Bird Dawg.  STPro takes in sports rehab after critical care rehab has restored core movement in load-bearing and validated initial recovery status with the Bird Dawg.  This easy and handy test picks up on an essential primal movement pattern that involves the entire kinetic chain: it tests to see if the core will fire in Primal movement.  Failing the Bird Dawg test and forcing primal movement anyway really, really, really pisses off the MPs.  Because they really do not like violating the chain of command, they will not relinquish the guarding patterns and may up the ante with muscle spasms.

 

Go from Primal to Functional

Once completing ground based work, rotational or “functional” patterns are essential.  Watch people who only weight train move – even uninjured – muscle recruitment patterns become robotic.  While strength is awesome – generally – classic weight room strength training are considered “gross motor movements”.   Meaning – they do not require coordination.  The MPs demand Basic Training in Coordination.  They want to see your time on the Obstacle Course run – not just Deadlift Max.  They will send you out back to chop wood, haul things, mend fences and do some hard labor until they are willing to release you back to Active Duty.  This is called “Functional” training.

Functional means chopping, cross-punch patterns, integrated pulling patterns, rotation against force.  Think farm work, and you got it.  Pulling and pushing like you would in real labor – not with the technique used in the gym.  MPs want rotational force with balance.  Exercises such as cable pulls with moderate weights – from a split stance – with rotation through the rib cage… now this will provide the MPs with the documentation they need.

Examples of rotational movements:  Paloff Press, Cable Pulls from Split Stance with Rotation, Cable Pull Wood Choppers, Suitcase Carry, Proper Cross-Punches Medium Bag,  Roundhouse Kicks  – any TRX Rip Trainer move especially Peter Holman’s TRX Rip for Firefighters.

And for final stage kinetic chain re-integration with functional and integrated moves, here are some ideas: This is your world. Shape it or someone else will.

 

There is a Zen expression:

What did you do before you were enlightened?  Answer: Chop wood, carry water.

What did you do after you were enlightened?  Answer: Chop wood, carry water.

water bucket

Carrying buckets of water, especially just one bucket, is an excellent core exercise.  Very primal and it requires stabilizers and balance.  This would make the MPs very happy.  Get back to Basic Training and reassure the body it can fully integrate the prior injury in a variety of coordination tasks.  The underrated Suitcase Carry is often used by athletic trainers in spite of much moaning and groaning from the team.  But it is highly effective at prehab, sports improvement and likewise rehab.   It is literally the Zen equivalent of carrying buckets of water.  Some Dojo Masters train the young men by carrying buckets of water up and down staircases.  Think you’re beyond the Basic Training and above Carrying Water: Tell it to the MPs.


 

THE MPS INSIST ON ATTENTION TO DETAIL

   MP DETAIL

 

Often in injury situations, bone alignments have shifted, tendon connections disabled and kinetic chain alignments are disrupted.  In other words, our bodies have had their original engineering specifications altered or essential lines of communication severed.  Our bodies know things are off.   Unlike a machine, the body doesn’t work off off design specifications.  Like any good engineer, our bodies need to run tests to calibrate, refine and re-calibrate system mechanics when major components have been severed.

During the rehab and recovery process it is essential to indulge the MPs in form nitpicking with awareness.  Careful attention to form is essential to these guys.

A few key points:

1) The knee always tracks over the first and second toe in any squat form

2) The core is activated (we must all pass the Quadruped/Bird Dawg test)

3) The serratus anterior and shoulder girdle/upper obliques are activated and engaged

 

For 1)  The generic advice on knee wobbling is to target Glut Med or blame TFL.   This is not a “one-off” muscle problem.  We can have plenty of strength and still screw things up.  STPro recommends target the whole lateral system with functional movement.  Make the MPs happy: Carry That Bucket of Water in Good Form!  Get Busy: This is your world. Shape it or someone else will.

For 2) Core activation.  STPro recommends checking in on the deep low abs connection and train beyond weight lifting, aka, “bad form”: Horror Movies – Don’t Go In There! Why You Should Go In There

For  3) Shoulder girdle engagement can be tricky and when shut down or partially disabled can lead strong people to injury – because the arms are strong there is the illusion of strength.  But, the problem with this illusion is the issue of having a base of support in the core.   Test yourself and focus intentionally on restoring smooth and stable rotational mechanics using moderate weights/loads at first: Holding Your Line


 

BASIC RE-TRAINING ESSENTIALS: THE MPS WILL INSIST ON MUSCLE ACTIVATION TEAMWORK FOR LOAD BEARING

MP LOADBEARING
Marines with combat load.  Bodies of movers and doers don’t respond well to therabands and bosu balls.  Those work well for “gym fitness” and average sedentary population.  It’s gonna take a lot more brain challenge with moderate to heavy loads to fire up the systems of an active and athletic body.  (In other words, typically, there are those who enjoy getting their rear end kicked with interesting challenges… and those who don’t.)

Before the MPs will open the gates, we need to consciously focus on how well we are using all of our muscles and movements in load bearing.  Ramping up the weights slowly and not relying too heavily on the compensating team members.  Start with primal movements and bring awareness to how you are moving.

Don’t just go through the motions and expect results.  Explore options and pay attention.  Like when we were kids learning how to move against gravity and bear load.  Tap the primal learning instincts by paying attention to how you move and how strong you feel.  Even try new things – and especially functional moves – throwing, hitting and climbing.  Go out and play with the kids – they are still in learning mode – the same systems that are wiring their movement the first time will rewire an adult after injury.

 


 

THE MPS WILL NOT RELEASE YOU UNTIL THEY ARE SATISFIED

 MP PRACTICE REPS

 

Once the body’s kinetic chain has a smooth function, the MPs are still not satisfied.  A few successful coordinated primal and functional workouts will not satisfy these guys.  They want massive practice repetitions.  They will make you run drill after drill after drill.  They want to completely rewrite muscle memory to function again.   STPro Atta Boy: Hang in There.  Don’t count reps.  Just hang in there.  Basic Re-Training isn’t any more fun the second time around than it was the first.

 


 

THEY “GOT ALL DAY”… AND ARE TRAINED STUBBORN

          MP STUBBORN DOG

The important takeaway here: don’t believe in a false summit.  Don’t even try to be patient.  Just accept it.  Keep in “retraining” mode for a year or so.  Guarding systems are rewriting and updating muscle memory built over long periods of time.  Focused commitment and consistent and repeatable practice will prevail.  Eventually, the MPs will release the guarding pattern and let you pass.  Keep in mind though, they have time.  Plenty of time.  And are not concerned with force of will or deadlines set outside of their chain of command.  They answer to survival and demand repetition.

 


HOW TO OUTSMART THE MPS

NASA APOLLO MISSION
NASA, Apollo Mission

 

The MPs can be distracted.  They like to  play games and solve puzzles.  One of the best ways to rehab: play games and learn a new skill-based sport. Games and challenges kick off our instinctive neural processes that create learning.  Anything with hand-eye coordination, aim, rotational movements (batting, chopping wood) and especially skills that require some balance – when done with the “Zen Beginner Mind” (not the adult mind that remembers all the old patterns that the MPs just blew away) – are most effective.  You have STPro’s permission to have fun again.  Play tag with the kids, try to climb a tree, practice learning how to jump onto and off of stuff, run in random directions.  Laughter is all core.  If you’re failing the Bird Dawg test, literally try a good belly laugh.

Try games or stunts with some manageable risk.  Risk kicks off learning hormones that encourage neural pathways – and these help to appease the MPs and facilitate writing new patterns to deep muscle memory.

streetball
Street ball, NYC, 1950.

 


ONCE THE MPS RELEASE AND CHANGE THE GUARD

innerchild

 

In the case of a permanent injury: carefully and deliberately make a plan of how to manage what the doctor told you not do do.  Use mindful awareness of how you’re gonna do it.  Because we are probably gonna do it anyway.  Remember the lessons from Stage 2 – we are wired to adapt and survive.  Use mindful training, practice and repetition to train a back-up plan – practice a few easy reps in bad form so your body knows what the bad form feels like — and train to not do that.   Deliberate mindfulness can enable us to do amazing things – and use skill to overcome adversity.

We are wired to be healthy, adapt, survive and heal ourselves.  Don’t let anyone ever tell you different – especially if they are dealing drugs.  If you aren’t getting positive, healing advice from your care providers, email STPro and we can find a certified sports medicine provider or suitable practitioner in your area to assist in Stage 1 and Stage 2 recovery.

 


POST SCRIPT: SPECIAL NOTES FOR TYPE A’S AND RE-INJURY ISSUES

Remember to Thank your survival systems for saving you – and even being grateful to the gatekeepers.

And, there is also this weird thing called rest.  STPro has actually tried it a couple times, and elusive like unicorns, it seems to have magical and mysterious healing properties.

CAT GUN UNICORN
Image: from a Magical Land where Type A people actually take a rest day… where their body can repair damaged tissue and heal bones.

 


Copyright Studio T, LLC 2016

Cross Training, STPro

This is your world. Shape it or someone else will.


1 Comment

Hey, I’m not a boxer so what’s with the cross-punch coach?  This sweet rotational movement requires fluid integration from the tip of the toe through the entire kinetic chain.

From firefighting to surfing, solid rotational mechanics are essential.  These movements leverage existing strength and require neurological patterns stored deep in muscle memory to generate powerful rotational force through the entire kinetic chain.

Martial arts inspired workouts, with emphasis on skill based moves, tend to be much more effective than a generic cross-train routine for adrenaline sports types such as mountain biking, mountaineering, surfing and snowboarding.  The cross-punch is a simple way to test strength, skill and intelligence through the whole kinetic chain in one move.  Any weaknesses or leakage in the body’s many systems are quickly revealed – so they can be isolated and trained.

The cross-punch has the biomechanical bonus feature of loading through the lumbar in a practical way – most strength training moves just load it up in extension – a good thing.  But too much of a good thing trains us to move like a B movie 1920s robot when it comes to the exertion of force through the kinetic chain.  A solid cross-punch form optimizes shoulder integration with the core, trains for solid transfer of force from glut drive and requires the lateral systems to really work smart.  So we can have more fun.


Push-Pull Rotational Mechanics in Action

Pro Surfer Josh Kerr naturally push-pulls through shoulders for the Alley-Oop

crazy kerrzy all

 

Here is the link the Surfer Magazine video.  Josh Kerr shares how he integrates head and shoulders first for this complicated move:  Alley Oop Breakdown


 

Training tip: practice slow.  You don’t own the move if you can’t do it slow and hold a balanced stance at the end.

 


Test & Train Your Cross-Punch

To me, boxing is like a ballet – except there’s no music, no choreography, and the dancers hit each other. – Jack Handy

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Fahness Lutalo, Master Trainer for OC MMA & Boxing Academy, teaching the cross-punch

This test was designed working with boxing coach Fahness Lutalo, OC MMA & Boxing Academy.  Fahness can teach you how to fight – but not if he is spending time fixing foundational mechanics.  That’s where STPro steps in.

The test here:


Optimizing Push-Pull Mechanics

Our bodies are wired so intelligently, that we can use the shoulder girdle to stabilize the hips even while we aren’t holding onto something.  For example, runner’s arms in sprints, using the shoulders to assist a carve on a snowboard or hitting a tennis ball.  All of these leverage a complex biomechanical balancing act across the entire kinetic chain.

At the top of the chain, one arm pushes while the other pulls… this balances rotational forces in the torso, like two hands on a steering wheel on a sharp curve.  This integrates with force generated by the gluts to tap our power center for movement.  Beyond that understanding, the less we try to micro-manage it and the more we practice with integrated moves, the better.

Not getting it? STPro Academy special… essential knowledge for athletes.  The why we train the lateral system even though it sucks speech..


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Less Talk – More Action

List of Kinetic Chain Builders

  • TRX Side Plank with Hip Drops
  • Corner Olympic Bar Presses
  • TRX Rip Rotates & Samurai Strikes by Pete Holman, former US Tae Kwondo Olympic Champ
  • TRX Rip Anything *as taught by* Peter Holman
  • Squat to Roundhouse bag kicks
  • Weighted Cable Single Arm Pull – Split Stance
  • Weighted Cable or Band Paloff Press – Split Stance
  • Single-arm Rocky push-ups
  • Single-leg RDL weighted to twist

Demos of Kinetic Chain Builders

TRX Side Plank with Hip Drops

  1. Shoulder directly over elbow
  2. Lift from *under* shoulder – engage serratus
    1. If you don’t know what the serratus anterior muscle does – if its not firing here, then you’re wasting time and effort. Here is a quick and important visualization: Serratus Anterion in Action
    2. Things every athlete needs to know about the amazing Serratus Anterior here: Pro Trainer Jeff on the Serratus Anterior for Athletes
  3. Test your form — deliberately “couch potato” slump to let the shoulder girdle disconnect and feel the bones flop… then reach the free hand under the shoulder to serratus anterior on those ribs and “pick yourself up” — this trick is also in the studio t pro demo below.  This works very well in practice.
  4. Maintain this underarm connection the entire set – saggy training trains saggy execution – holding form this during the set protects anterior shoulder joint… but more importantly — trains the shoulder girdle to stay connected to the core power center and hips under stress.

 

Corner Olympic Bar Presses

  1. If you’re not feeling good about your Cross-Punch, this move may not get you much except some AC joint pain and lumbar torsion
  2. The bar presses require total body tension (a Bruce Lee term) active from the punch-toe through the pinky finger of the grip.  Feel the force line from toe to glut – glut thru obliques – obliques to serratus anterior – to the front oblique connection at the solar plexus – to pinky.  Drive the bar with this full force engagement every rep.
  3. Here the extremity is just a delivery mechanism.  Force comes from the glut drive.  Push the bar up from the gluts and under the shoulder.  Pushing from anterior deltoids and extremities only defeats the purpose.
  4. If you can do more than 8-10 with moderate weight, you’re doing it wrong.

Squat to Roundouse Kicks

First study Bruce Lee’s Roundhouse.  Most shots you see are his signature kick where he is literally flying.  This is his roundhouse – weight on standing leg shifts to ball of foot – push-pull thru torso – left arm comes in like a standing oblique “crunch” – right arm drives back stiff from the shoulder – eyes on target..

bruce lee roundhouse

I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the  man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times. – Bruce Lee

——————-

Roundhouse  Tech Tips

rotationalkicks.gif

  1. Kick from arm’s distance away
  2. Aim, aim, aim.  Strike with top of foot or shin
  3. Stay light on feet – bounce before kicks
  4. Total body rotation and engagement – if you can do this for more than a minute you’re doing it wrong
  5. Push-pull mechanics – arm on same side as kick leg drives *back*
  6. Squat to 90dg – get full stretch on gluts to snap up into the kick

Working the kicks – stay completely in the zone.  Pretend that bag is going to kick you back. 

From Master Bruce Lee on Readiness

“The danger of training with the heavy bag is that it doesn’t react to one’s attack and sometimes there is a tendency to thoughtlessness.  One will punch the bag carelessly, and would be vulnerable in a real situation if this became a habit.”

 

Weighted Cable Single Arm Pull – Split Stance

From Youtube:  Simple form from split lunge

Tech Tips:

  • Wide split stance is more martial arts and functional – for integration benefits vary the stance – experiment with your base of support in a lunge – don’t just make it easy – experiment with angles you might use in a sport or movement
  • Vary the height and pull angle – experiment – try to pull from where you feel like falling over – stay in form and don’t fall over
  • Pull from underneath the shoulder – avoid getting hunchy or “trappy” – hunchy is a substitution strategy – shifting work from the upper obliques and core into the  anterior delts and traps who are not well positioned to manage anterior force loads.  Think dislocated shoulder and busted AC joint. Pull from underneath the shoulders.
  • Stay in moderate weights and fight for balance
  • Rotate, rotate, rotate -and don’t fall down – and pull from under the shoulder – and stay light on your feet – and keep a steady gaze on the target – and integrate breathing – and make Bruce happy,  make it look easy

 

 

Weighted Cable or Band Paloff Press – Split Stance

Paloff training tip – vary the stance.  Don’t get hung-up on lunges.  Let the back foot drift.  Stability is dynamic – our machine calculates it on the fly for various angles.  So train various  power angles.

paloff in action

“I’m gonna float like a butterfly and sting like a bee, the hands can’t hit what they eyes don’t see.” Muhammad  Ali

 

Single-arm Plyometric Push-ups

 

 

Single Leg RDL Weighted Twist

Demo from Altis Running athlete:  Flawless Form from the running coaches at Altis

Most RDL forms exclude the rotation twist – but this ignores an essential dynamic kinetic chain integration function.  Optimized rotational mechanics require consistent training for maintenance.  When rotational mechanics shut down, there may a lumbar issue.  If there are issues with executing a smooth and balanced twist from this movement – stop right here.  Visit and stay tuned for more from the Studio T Pro project on lumbar issues for hard workers who might have hurt their backs doing crazy stuff and can’t rotate.   The Gist of it:  Straight Talk on Lumbar Issues & Rotational Mechanics – aka Functional Hard Work  It is not enough to strengthen the lumbar – it must retrain to reintegrate for rotational mechanics.  Fixing and restoring this essential foundational movement function is the focus of the Studio T project: Dynamic Alternatives to Yoga with Lumbar Issues

Targeting Weak Areas

 

Serratus Anterior, the Boxer’s Muscle

images.duckduckgo.com2

  • Stabilizing function: TRX front shoulder plank & body saw
  • Stabilizing function: Studio T Pro Special – Side shoulder plank rotates AB set
  • Stabilizing function: Side straight arm twist
  • Stabilizing function: Side straight arm twist to push-up
  • Strength: Serratus cable pulls
  • Strength: TRX atomic crunch & oblique crunch
  • Integration with Obliques: Hollow-ab Handstand Wall Walks


Demos for Targeting Weak Areas

 

Serratus Anterior, the Boxer’s Muscle

images.duckduckgo.com

 

 Serratus Cable Pulls

In studio practice, we do Serratus cable pulls with weights or the pilates machines and ring variations.  And we all look exactly like this guy.

Serratus cable pulls are essentially a standing version of the iron cross. 

iron cross serratus pull 2

 Well, maybe not exactly.  But the key point is that this is not a Lateral Raise.  It is a push – pull at the same time.  The pull is the lats acting as a stabilizer for fixed shoulders.  The push is the pattern that engages the serratus anterior linking into the core systems.  Note the oblique line of the blue angle and striped pattern on the shirt.  That is the key connection from backside to front side body with core musculature forming a sling. (In dogs, the serratus anterior acts as a sling for the shoulder on a fixed chassis – similar to a car chassis.  In humans, due to the standing function, the serratus anterior forms a power sling for vertical support.)

How-to: in the weight room, stand in center of the cables athletic stance holding one cable from each side of the cage – moderate weights – stiff-arm pull both cables from just below 90dg down to the side body *from underneath shoulder* –  make sure to keep wrist straight (stay out of extremities – make the serratus anterior stabilize for the pull).  Think opposite of lateral raise.  Maintain athletic stance – weight balanced on feet.  (No hunch shoulders – keep the upper traps and delts out of this). As pull down, feel taller, like rising up out of a tube.  Moderate weights.

Below- Serratus Cable Pulls – STPro learned this move from a Master Cirque du Soleil trainer…

 

Raw Strength: TRX atomic crunch & oblique crunch

Do lots of these. Don’t  count sets and reps.  Do stay totally connected with total body tension.  Tapering works here – meaning go into the spot where it hurts the most and pulse with control there.  If you’re shaking – pause and hold form and stay in the shakesShakes are stabilizer muscles working their “reps”  systematically to train efficiency in coordinated power movements.  Ignoring this function often turns prime movers into stabilizers reducing overall power and flirting with injury.  Keep going until you can’t stand it, and then do another 5 seconds or so.  And stay in form.  And keep your gaze neutral.  And don’t clinch or grip.  Those last 5 seconds holding form train your neural pathways to Hold Their Line under stress.  You’re  Welcome (evil trainer laugh).

Key Form Pointers on the TRX

  1. Really press tops of feet into straps and feel that lever through your whole body
  2. No hip sagging – absolutely no sagging – body is solid as a stick – lever hips up
  3. Push the floor away – push, push, push away like its the end of the world.  This trains the serratus and upper obliques to hold the line under fatigue
  4. Make up variations – try to smoothly transition between forms – repeat forms where you wobble or use momentum from the straps to execute the movement

Get random patterns to challenge dynamic stabilizing systems.  If running random patterns is difficult, then remedial work is necessary.  For true strength a synergistic routine – requiring integrated skill and coordination – one should be able to run3-5 sets solid multiple sets of 1mn with variations.

 


Targeting Weak Areas

 

Glut Med Strength & Stabilization Function

  • Single Leg RDL
  • Sumo Lunges Kneel to Stand
  • Single Leg Lunge with Floor Tap – freestanding
  • Single Leg Curtsy Lunge – TRX or freestanding

 

Single Leg RDL Demo Here of Single Leg RDL for Resisting Rotation – aka – Stabilizing Lumbar Move Torso from the Glut – No Breaks in Lumbar *at all*

 

Oblique Strength as a Mobilizer

  • TRX Oblique Crunch
  • Hanging oblique crunches bent knees

wahlberg crunches oblique

 

 


Synergistic Workout Session

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Studio T teaches “synergistic” workouts – routines designed as a muscle-activation sequence or “flow”.  They work like a NASA launch sequence to activate the human body’s dynamic core power to produce capabilities unattainable by simplistic one-off exercise training routines.  For more about why this method is superior, see the Studio T Pro Mission Statement here:  Mission  
For now, let’s get on with it knowing the following sample routine is based on these principles.

 


Warmup  – Start Integrated & Ground Based

 

Stay in sequence:

  1. Spiderman push-ups
  2. Spiderman  crawl
  3. Inchworms
    • Rolldown in hollow abs – weight on ball of foot – lumbar rounds – feel abs work to control the move
    • Tight hamstrings roll down to floor as far as possible then fall and catch yourself in push-up arms
  4. Side shoulder plank rotates
  5. Shoulder plank on fitball and spell words like Ninja

For advanced movers, add handstand wall walks and push-ups here – early in the workout.  The wall walks engage the obliques as stabilizers and add control for moves in the next round.  

Workout – 3 Rounds – AB Sets

 

AB 1  Squat-Strike Muscle Activation

A Bodyweight Squat to 90

B TRX Rip Progression by  Round

  1. Round 1 Stiff-arm Canister Rotates
  2. Round 2 Samurai Strikes
  3. Round 3 Side Blocks Sumo Squat

B  Alternative no TRX Rip — Paloffs & Rocky Plyos

  1. Round 1 Split stance Paloff presses cross-punch stance to fail
  2. Round 2 Resisted punches from cross-punch stance to fail
  3. Round 3 Plyometric Rocky Push-ups

 

AB 2  Dynamic Pull-Push

A Broad to Medium Pronated Grip Pull-ups

(add Jump to bar for increased intensity – grab that sucker and stabilize as quickly as you can – lower down miserably slow – then jump up and hit it again… and again)

B Squat to Roundhouse Kicks

 

AB 3 Dynamic Core Whammer

A Wahlberg Crunches & Oblique Crunches

B Skip rope

Walhberg Crunches – this is a muscle activator – not just any random strength training move – stay in 90dg bent arms – stabilize & pull from *under* shoulders – stay in round back, never let the back arch –  this crunch form fires deep low abs – make it really really curly at tailbone – try to aim the tailbone to the ceiling –  force deep low abs to work to fight the desire to arch the lumbar when the hips lower down.  Really fight it.   The bent arm 90dg pull forces the shoulder girdle to stabilize and pull without a break each rep.  This core connection pattern is essential for the roundhouse kicks – no hyperextension arch in the back when you connect on the kick and  the integrated shoulder girdle drives push-pull rotary mechanics – so rehearse this pattern holding a deep tuck in these Wahlbergs.  It will improve kicking power in the next round.

wahlberg crunches

 

 

Finisher – Dynamic Stretch

 

Optional – Finish Strong:  Choose a core strength move where you felt weakest – run that to failure – keep the core failure moves *at the end* of the routine – working to fail on core early in the rounds ruins form as all integrated moves rely on a solid core connection.  

Ending –  Whatever you need to stretch.   Most athletes seem to like to get a good last stretch in on the lumbar with Inchworm rolldowns (no push-up, just the rolling down and back up to stand).  Another favorite closer is Shoulder Dislocates.  


This is a story about Mercy. It’s also about revenge… justice… and fighting for yourself. – Batman, 1988


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Studio T Pro Edition is dedicated to professional training using synergistic routines incorporating biomechanics into applied practice.  We are on a never ending mission for excellence.  

The Mission Is Underway.  The Plan:  Synergistic Training


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