High Frequency Bodyweight Training

Prioritize Training You Enjoy

Everybody should work on things that they are not very good at. Areas where you might be weak or lifts you need more reps in to get better performing. But you also must do stuff you actually enjoy.

Case in Point: Last Saturday according to the program I am working through I should have done a pressing lift with a barbell, either a Close Grip Bench Press or a Inclined Bench Press. But you know what? I didn’t effing feel like doing anything with a barbell.

I went with a High Frequency Bodyweight Exercise workout, because I realling like to do those. Pulls Ups and Dips using As Many Reps As Possible (AMRAP), because I love doing those workouts.

People fall into this trap all the time on a given program. They believe the program is written in stone where many times you can simply adjust for a day and pick back up the next workout. If a program is SOOO strict that you cannot stray in any way, shape or form. AND you are not getting ready for a powerlifting competition. STRAY!!!

Good lord! We are doing this as a part of a continued journey to overrall better fitness and health. To build muscle, lose fat, get stronger, be healthier in Body, Mind and Spirit. If you are stuck in a program where you dread the upcoming workout, ALL THE TIME, get the hell off that program.

This is not to say to always avoid exercises you may not love. If you can walk, you gotta do some leg stuff. Squats, Deadlifts, Farmers Walk, etc. But please allow some flexibility into your program so you don’t begin to hate it.

We see this all the time, especially at this point in the year where so many people are jumping back into fitness due to the New Year. They get back into the gym. They are Gung Ho about it, going 4 days a week, for about a month. Nearly without fail, so many people get on a program they begin to dread. Well, who would want to do something long term that makes them miserable?

This Monday I picked right back up with the Barbell lift I needed to do Saturday, No big deal. I am still on track, and probably better for it as I was refreshed and not beaten up from the Saturday lift. As I’ve stated numerous times on this site, High Frequency Bodyweight Training is KING for the majority of us who are not utilizing anabolic help. I never feel like crap after a session of Pull Ups and Dips. Never.

This applies to all fitness endeavors. If you have a cardio day coming up, and you HATE cardio, for the love of god find alternative cardio methods. If all you do for Cardio is a treadmill, and you hate it, use a Rower. Use a Ski Erg. Do a Spin Class. Do a lightweight circuit workout. Find something different. Even if you don’t love the alternative, change in itself can be worth it and refreshing. Fitness is not a one time thing, it is a lifetime thing. Incorporate things you like WAY more than things you hate. If you are on a program that is way too strict, find a new program. I will help you find a new program, but for the love of god do not quit because you dread a particular workout.

High Frequency Bodyweight Training with AMRAP: Blast Upper Body

High frequency bodyweight training combined with As Many Reps As Possible (AMRAP) combines the most tried and true methods of strength training with an extremely easy to follow methodology.

Due to its simplicity bodyweight training does not require a ton of equipment; therefore it does not sell a ton of gym memberships or fancy personal training signups.  In fact, if a personal trainer would actually apply these methods a lot of clients would probably walk out as it seems too simple to actually work.  And that is the beauty of it; it is so F-ing simple to follow and the results are staggering. Combine these exercises with AMRAP, and you have an extremely effective muscle AND strength building program.

How?

You identify 2-3 exercises, circuit through them for X number of rotations and that is your day's work out.  Then you rinse and repeat X days per week.  The overarching goal is to get to a certain number of reps for that workout, which add up to a goal number of reps for the week, which add up to a goal number of reps for the month.  As an example maybe you want to get to 500 pullups for the month by starting with 15 pullups day 1, add 1 each day over the course of 20 workouts in month (5 workouts per week, for 4 weeks), by the end of the month you will be doing 35 pullups in the final workout.

High Frequency?

Definitions vary, but high frequency means hitting an area 3+ times a week.  In the case of bodyweight type exercises it is more like 5 times a week as the tax your body has to pay from a single workout is not that tremendous compared to a max effort day of deadlifts, bench presses or squats.  You simply add a rep or two per exercise each day and the cumulative volume over the week forces your body to adapt.  And that is the magic formula, doing numerous sets for an amount of reps that is a challenge, but a single set is not grueling effort.  By the last set the difficulty will definitely increase but should still not be impossible.

Now go in the next day and do the SAME exact exercises, but add 1 rep to the total for each exercise for that day.  Do this 5 times a week for a one month.  

Doubts?  See Gymnasts

If you have doubts regarding this style of training being effective, take a look at gymnasts.  Especially gymnasts on the parallel bars and rings.  Gymnasts are among the athletes with the most desirable bodies from muscular and symmetry standpoint.  Gymnasts are properly proportioned with functional muscle, and of course, biceps that POP.

Gymnasts perform some accessory lifting but the meat and potatoes of a gymnast's workout program consists of actually performing the bodyweight exercises.  Muscle ups and handstands are a couple of the most difficult exercises to perform; these are exercises that I would doubt most bodybuilders or powerlifters could even execute.  Gymnasts do these exercises by the 1000s per week.

Getting stronger and looking better are almost always the primary goals of training.  And if girls want to lose fat the BEST way is by getting stronger.  If you pattern your goals around a type of athlete who would you rather look like?  

An impossibly strong Powerlifter who has amazing max lifts but is very bulky and possibly has a lot of noticeable body fat?  A marathoner who can run very long distances and has a great cardiovascular capacity, but no muscle tone whatsoever?

Not many people would seek either of these types of bodies for themselves yet too many people train in either of these manners.  Too many people either lift WAY too heavy, all the time.  Or too many people in an effort to lose weight do countless hours of cardio which rips away as much muscle, or more, than fat.

AMRAP - AS MANY REPS AS POSSIBLE

AMRAP workouts are a great mix in at any point in an individual workout, or overall program.  AMRAPs get a lot of pub via Crossfit but they have been around forever as a technique to pump in a ton of work in a short amount of time.  This cranks up the density of your training as you will pound a specific movement for X amount of minutes.

HOW TO AMRAP

It can be any lift. If you really want a complete workout, I suggest choosing compound exercises (Pull Ups with Dips). You set a timer, do a bunch of reps, then do it again and beat that total.

AMRAP PROGRESSION

The first time you do an AMRAP exercise, count your reps for that set amount of minutes.  Next time you do this lift, try to break that rep count in the same amount of time.  Thats it.  The rest time should be very short, nothing over 20 seconds unless you are going really heavy.  This is the secret sauce that makes it work.

WHY AMRAP WORKS

If forces you to compete with yourself to knock out extra reps than you normally would in say a 3 or 4 set approach.  When you continue to add reps in the same timeframe you are forcing UP your workload and your body must adapt, by building muscle and strength.  Lets say you row 100 LBs for 4 sets of 10, with a 1 minute rest between sets, where you hit 10, 10, 8 and 7 on those four sets.  Attempting an AMRAP on that same weight you would probably get something like 10, 5, 3, 3, 3 ,3, 2, 2, 2, 2, 1, 1 ,1 ,1, 1. before 4 minutes are up.  Which would equate to 40 or so reps, vs the 35 reps you hit with the conventional method.  Now next week you try to hit 42 and so on.  After to get to a target, such as 50, bump up the weight.

I am a big fan of this approach, but don't overuse it.  I would recommend only using it on 1 exercise per training session as it can wipe you out a bit if you overapply it.   I also like it a ton for fellow wheelchair lifters since we can get setup on one exercise and bang this out without changing weights 3-4 different times.  Load up, rep out, go home.

Closed Chain Rules

The last piece of this is the bodyweight exercises which should really be its own post.  For the upper body there are few exercises that are more effective than Pull Ups, Dips and Pushups.  And if you can do Handstand pushups against a wall, you are set!  These are all closed chain exercises which are MUCH more effective as the body was designed to do these.

A closed chain exercise can be explained as follows:

  1. In a Pulling scenario when doing a pullup we are pulling our body to something.

  2. In a Pushing scenario when doing a pushup we are pushing our body away from something.

This is why a Pullup is a MUCH more effective exercise than a lat pull down.  This is why a pushup is more effective than a bench press.  One negative with pullups and pushups is there is a challenge to adding a lot of weight.  We can add some but adding enough weight for a 1 rep max on a push up would be difficult which is why bench presses, rows, etc. are needed as well.

 

Conclusion

High frequency bodyweight training can be highly effective due to the cumulative effect it has on the body.  By doing A LOT of pullups, pushups or dips your body is forced to adapt.  And pullups dips and pushups work because close chain exercises are AWESOME. Combine this with AMRAP programming and you have an extremely simple yet effective program.

 

Bodyweight Training 101: Power of High Frequency

High frequency bodyweight training is among the most tried and true methods of strength training.  Due to its simplicity bodyweight training does not require a ton of equipment; therefore it does not sell a ton of gym memberships or fancy personal training signups.  In fact, if a personal trainer would actually apply these methods a lot of clients would probably walk out as it seems too simple to actually work.  And that is the beauty of it; it is so F-ing simple to follow and the results are staggering.

How?

You identify 2-3 exercises, circuit through them for X number of rotations and that is your day's work out.  Then you rinse and repeat X days per week.  The overarching goal is to get to a certain number of reps for that workout, which add up to a goal number of reps for the week, which add up to a goal number of reps for the month.  As an example maybe you want to get to 500 pullups for the month by starting with 15 pullups day 1, add 1 each day over the course of 20 workouts in month (5 workouts per week, for 4 weeks), by the end of the month you will be doing 35 pullups in the final workout.

High Frequency?

Definitions vary, but high frequency means hitting an area 3+ times a week.  In the case of bodyweight type exercises it is more like 5 times a week as the tax your body has to pay from a single workout is not that tremendous compared to a max effort day of deadlifts, bench presses or squats.  You simply add a rep or two per exercise each day and the cumulative volume over the week forces your body to adapt.  And that is the magic formula, doing numerous sets for an amount of reps that is a challenge, but a single set is not grueling effort.  By the last set the difficulty will definitely increase but should still not be impossible.

Now go in the next day and do the SAME exact exercises, but add 1 rep to the total for each exercise for that day.  Do this 5 times a week for a one month.  

Doubts?  See Gymnasts

If you have doubts regarding this style of training being effective, take a look at gymnasts.  Especially gymnasts on the parallel bars and rings.  Gymnasts are among the athletes with the most desirable bodies from muscular and symmetry standpoint.  Gymnasts are properly proportioned with functional muscle, and of course, biceps that POP.

Gymnasts perform some accessory lifting but the meat and potatoes of a gymnast's workout program consists of actually performing the bodyweight exercises.  Muscle ups and handstands are a couple of the most difficult exercises to perform; these are exercises that I would doubt most bodybuilders or powerlifters could even execute.  Gymnasts do these exercises by the 1000s per week.

Getting stronger and looking better are almost always the primary goals of training.  And if girls want to lose fat the BEST way is by getting stronger.  If you pattern your goals around a type of athlete who would you rather look like?  

An impossibly strong Powerlifter who has amazing max lifts but is very bulky and possibly has a lot of noticeable body fat?  A marathoner who can run very long distances and has a great cardiovascular capacity, but no muscle tone whatsoever?

Not many people would seek either of these types of bodies for themselves yet too many people train in either of these manners.  Too many people either lift WAY too heavy, all the time.  Or too many people in an effort to lose weight do countless hours of cardio which rips away as much muscle, or more, than fat.

Closed Chain Rules

The last piece of this is the bodyweight exercises which should really be its own post.  For the upper body there are few exercises that are more effective than Pull Ups, Dips and Pushups.  And if you can do Handstand pushups against a wall, you are set!  These are all closed chain exercises which are MUCH more effective as the body was designed to do these.

A closed chain exercise can be explained as follows:

  1. In a Pulling scenario when doing a pullup we are pulling our body to something.

  2. In a Pushing scenario when doing a pushup we are pushing our body away from something.

This is why a Pullup is a MUCH more effective exercise than a lat pull down.  This is why a pushup is more effective than a bench press.  One negative with pullups and pushups is there is a challenge to adding a lot of weight.  We can add some but adding enough weight for a 1 rep max on a push up would be difficult which is why bench presses, rows, etc. are needed as well.

 

Conclusion

High frequency bodyweight training can be highly effective due to the cumulative effect it has on the body.  By doing A LOT of pullups, pushups or dips your body is forced to adapt.  And pullups dips and pushups work because close chain exercises are AWESOME.