eighteen extreme exercises

Just found this video on youtube and was pretty impressed.  Although I’ve never had much luck with the human flag, I don’t work on it much either.  The straddle planche pushups though, I work at everyday.  Closer but still not there.  All the others I’ve got pretty well.  So I guess I’m getting somewhere!

  1. standing ab wheel rollout
  2. back lever
  3. hannibal pullups
  4. korean dips
  5. one-arm one-leg pushups
  6. leg lifts
  7. straddle planche pushups
  8. L-sit walk
  9. human flag
  10. superman pushup
  11. dragon flag
  12. side-to-sides
  13. handstand pushup to nose
  14. elbow step pushups – together
  15. muscle-up with false grip
  16. stall bar hold
  17. deep handstand pushups
  18. bicycle pullups

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new handstand pushups – on medicine ball

A new twist on handstand pushups.  If handstand pushups get too easy, try deep press hanstand pushups (on parallettes) where your chest comes down to hand level.  If those get to easy, destabilize one or both of your hands with a medicine ball.  And a caveat aka warning, please don’t try this if you struggle with basic handstand pushups.  You’ll fall splat on your face!!

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xvest demo – 110% bodyweight clapping pushups

I finally bought a weight vest.  If you’re serious about bodyweight training, it’s only a matter of time.  Here I demo the xvest.  I’m really happy with it.  It’s super adjustable, in one pound increments from zero to 40 pounds, and fits really snug with velcro elastic straps around the core.  Good stuff!!

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Introducing The Wall Walk

 This is an exercise I learned from my gymnastics teacher.  If you can do a wall walk to start, try getting into the basic backbend or wheel as they call it in yoga.  From there lift one hand for five seconds, put it back.  Lift the other hand for five seconds, put it back.  Then lift a leg, then the other leg.  Try to remain fully inflated, and stretch through your upper back as much as possible.  You want the pressure on your arms and shoulders, not your lower back.  Good luck!

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five minutes of intensity

As I’m always trying to think of new ways to mix up the workout, I recently added a little twist to my sets and reps.  The idea is simple.  Set your stopwatch to countdown from 5 minutes.  Then do as many as you possibly can in that five minute period.  Short reps, long reps, rest as long as you like.  But the total count is what you’re interested in.  Keep track.  Over time you’ll surely improve your five minute max!!

  • pullups – 45
  • planche pushups – 80
  • floor walk – 140
  • handstand shoulder shrug – 80

Those were my numbers.  Oh, one other little itty bitty detail.  I did these with a my new xvest weight vest loaded with 20 pounds.  Now I weigh 145 so that’s about 15% of my body weight.  Will have more on the new weight vest next week, so stay tuned.

Put a good size break between your five minute sets or you’ll have nothing left at the end!  Good luck!!

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hand walks – shoulders and core

This training skill works the shoulders with the full eight of the body, and demands a balanced weight shift and very tight core in order to execute.  If you’re having trouble with this trick as-is, try resting one foot on a gymnastics scooter.

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straddle planche hold

After many years of building basic strength, I’m finally starting to get somewhere with this planche training.  Take a look at my first straddle planche holds…

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Learn from the Astronauts & Dr Sanjay Gupta

I’ve harped on about weightbearing exercise before.  It’s very important.  The force of gravity upon the skeletal system stimultes bone growth, and health.

I was just watching CNN today, and Sanjay Gupta was interviewing some scientists at NASA on the affects of weightlessness on the astronauts bodies.

Here’s the article:  Making Gravity Work For You by Dr Sanjay Gupta

Some hightlights…

I learned how beneficial gravity is for us on Earth. Doctors call it axial load. You can think of it as a slight tension on our bodies, more importantly our ligaments, tendons and bones. Turns out, this slight pulling of gravity slows down the loss of bone mass, which in space accelerates 10 times faster than a post-menopausal woman.

and more importantly…

The message for the rest of us is to embrace gravity. In addition to your aerobic exercise, which you should do most days of the week, add some axial load to your routine. And, this is a message for everyone, especially women in their 40s and 50s who will have to deal with menopause. Pick up some dumbbells, park yourself under a bench press or learn how to use a cable system. It’s good for your health and for your bones.

For the rest of us into bodyweight training, all the different types of pushups, handstands, pullups etc all count as weightbearing exercise too.

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planche pushups – feet against the wall

Still working on planche pushups steadily.  Here are some average-ish planche pushups, feet against the wall…

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peck flys on scooters

Scooters you probably remember from your high school or middle school gym days.  For bodyweight training, you can use them for all sorts of things.  Here I’m doing peck flys, which you might normally do on a bench with barbels.  The scooters work quite well.  Adjust the weight by starting on your knees, or on your toes, but with legs apart.  Try to keep your arms straight.  My left arm bends a lot, not sure what to do about that yet…

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