rydra_wong (
rydra_wong) wrote in
lifting_heavy_things2015-03-02 05:36 pm
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This is my kind of fitness essay
From The Hairpin:
Melinda Misener: How To Do Pull-ups
Occasionally I tried to do unassisted pull-ups. Halfway up, I’d get stuck. The feeling wasn’t as painful as it was puzzling. Up, I told myself. Go up.
In time I saw that this stuckness, rather than any physical pain, was what made me so reluctant to try. I wondered how many times I’d overlooked powerlessness as the source of my discomfort. I philosophized: was it wiser, in general, to make peace with impotence or resist it by any means possible?
Melinda Misener: How To Do Pull-ups
Occasionally I tried to do unassisted pull-ups. Halfway up, I’d get stuck. The feeling wasn’t as painful as it was puzzling. Up, I told myself. Go up.
In time I saw that this stuckness, rather than any physical pain, was what made me so reluctant to try. I wondered how many times I’d overlooked powerlessness as the source of my discomfort. I philosophized: was it wiser, in general, to make peace with impotence or resist it by any means possible?
no subject
I'm currently doing the Twenty Pull-ups program, which seems to be a website sponsored by a pull-up bar manufacturer and has ripped off the plan from the principles of the various "[X number] of [Y exercise]" plans, but it's a decent plan and seems to be boosting my numbers (though not as sharply as the plan thinks they should, so I'm going to be re-doing some weeks at a different level).
There's also the fighter pull-up program, which I might try at some future point (though not every day, because I know that would work badly for me).
I can always use the extra upper body strength for climbing (I am weak relative to most people I climb with), so wanted to see if I can give it a bit of a boost, especially as I'm going on a climbing trip at the end of the month.
Oh, side-note: some people (I am one of them) find they get elbow tendonitis from doing lots of pull-ups.
This is actually incredibly fixable -- there's a set of specific rehab/prehab exercises which have a magical effect (Sekrit Climber Knowledge! okay, just stuff that doesn't seem to be so widely known outside the elbow-tendonitis-prone climbing field). I knew doing a pull-up program would make my elbows stressed, so I just spend a few extra minutes doing said exercises to keep my tendons happy.
If you get any elbow twinges (hopefully you won't), let me know and I'll start throwing links at you. *g*
no subject
I would love to see the tendon exercises, just in case! I use the term "pullups" kind of loosely, though -- I am actually doing the biofeedback stuff I mentioned in an earlier post to pick which grip I use, and usually do neutral grip pullups. So for it's not an issue, but that can always change!
no subject
Oh, that's really cool. It's nice when you can play something intuitively like that.
I would love to see the tendon exercises, just in case!
http://www.drjuliansaunders.com/index.php/download_file/-/view/28/ -- this is the pdf which fixed my elbows when I was a n00b climber and climbed my way right into elbow tendonitis/osis, as so many of us do.
Magic stuff, heavily cited and endorsed in the section on elbows in Make or Break, the state-of-the-art book on climbing injuries that just came out.
Dave MacLeod's blog review of the research knowledge about why this stuff works and what exactly it's doing:
http://onlineclimbingcoach.blogspot.co.uk/2011/02/golferstennis-elbow-etc-what-eccentrics.html