Much Ado About Nothing
I apologize for my lack of posting lately, but I guess I’m in more of a “doing” phase (training and coaching) than, uh, writing about doing. I just finished my second week of 5/3/1 , and while its too early to really report back anything, it is nice to have an actual plan and I reccomend that more people start having one.
It’s fun to kind of train as you go (I did a lot of that in the past year), but there needs to be some attainable goals and a serious action plan to get there.
I’m no Floyd Mayweather or anything, hell, I’ve only fought in one ammy Muay Thai event a couple of smokers, but for what its worth I’m probably a better striker than I am anything else in life. I still have a ways to go, technically, and I’m never satisfied, but one thing I’ve always done is just grind on the basics and I’ve always had concrete goals (”I want to work on my footwork, my handspeed, balance, headmovement”, whatever) and did what was necessary to acheive them. I would work on ONE or TWO goals at a time, get them, and then move on/work on adding my new skills to my game. Nothing got in the way of those goals – not the latest internet craze or radically different training philosophy – just a lot of hard work and refinement of the basics.
Lifting, or strength and conditioning, needs to be treated the same (more or less just repeating this to myself). While most of my goals over the past 6 or 7 years have been geared towards becoming a better fighter/martial artist, it’s sad when I look through my old training logs and realize that I haven’t made THAT much progress (is that you, too?). My biggest problem has always been trying to run my head through a wall and never taking the time to actually deload and give my body a break. Looking back to old journals of when I was 17-19 years old, I was on my way to becoming scary strong…what the fuck happened?! Sure, I’ve learned a lot and I’ve made vast improvements in overall athleticism, mobility, speed, etc…but enough is enough – I need to get stronger. One, because it will help me become a better, more powerful athlete (human being), and two – it’s awesome.
So, get stronger I will. I’ve even cut down my warm ups to just foam rolling and one of Cressey’s mobility/activation series – dropping the complexes, calisthenics, and whatever else is allowing me to focus more on the meat of my training session. Extensive warm ups are all good and everything, but there’s a time and place. Anyway, lifting is a lot of fun again and I’m loving setting PR’s and having a focus again.


