Back in black.
Why this journal?2008 was not my year lifting wise. In January and early February I was still at it with a vengeance, doing the most intense squat training of my life in the form of a somewhat watered down version of the infamous
Smolov squat cycle... pure torture with intense loading three times a week.
I knew I
probably was not quite in good enough shape for it, but after a layoff following the birth of our daughter and second child Renée in October 2007, I felt like
really taming the iron. I don't recall precisely what happened, it may have been a series of sleepless nights up with a screaming newborn, the demands of going from being a freelancer to landing a
real job in social networking or something else, but I missed a couple of workouts... a real no-no on Smolov. The program was dead in the water, and my meet plans with it. Feeling, and rightly so, that a bit of rest could be in order before returning to regular training I took it.
And that was that. For the first time since my years in Tibet 1999-2001, I lost the habit of hitting the gym. Most of my free time, which usually started at 10 or 11pm after the rest of the family was down for the night, was at this stage solely dedicated to pushing Virtualmeet.net forward... and frankly, I was willing to sacrifice my own training to get more time to program. I did a few weeks of training in late spring and during the summer, but in June I found myself occupied day and night with renovating our new apartment bought in May on short notice... a huge job that is only now getting wrapped up.
In November, I hit the gym again. Inspired by the
first virtual weightlifting meet, I set my sight on the weightlifting meet in April 2009. I had great fun starting to learn the lifts and really enjoyed doing something that felt a bit more athletic than brute force powerlifting. My lower back also enjoyed it a lot more (I've been
a chronic back case after I sustained a
low back injury doing good mornings back in late 2003).
But my upper back hated it. I was flexible enough to properly fix the bar overhead, perhaps thanks to a past as an avid martial artist who once upon a time could do splits cold... but just barely. A few workouts later, even a broomstick was a challenge. Out of the gym again to heal up.
Which brings us to: now! Today, I made the promise to do what it takes to once again turn lifting into the habit it used to be... to be in the gym rain or shine. Frankly, it is scary to have experienced first hand how easy it is to slip from being a training nut into... well... a slouch. I've lost plenty of good weight and my powerlifts are down 30-40 kg each. It's a slippery slope and I don't want to see what's at the bottom of it... I also want to roll with the gang
come the first Virtualmeet.net gathering in July... and most of all, I want my kids to grow up with a dad who is physically active with the strength to hoist them overhead as teenagers (if they'll still let me). Did I mention it also feels good?
Long route, short point: this journal is here to put my focus back on the iron. Any pointers from you fellow lifters on my training is an appreciated bonus.
Battleplan AMy main goals for the first half of the year is to learn the weightlifts in order to put up a decent baseline in the April 10-12th weightlifting meet and to get my powerlifts at least within 10 kg of my meet bests come the July 10-12th powerlifting meet at the Virtualmeet.net gathering. To achieve these aims, I will naturally need to be humble enough to adjust my training as needed to keep away from prolonged back pain.
As a further mark of me being back, I also signed up for
the military bench meet in two weeks. I am coming into it cold with no preparations whatsoever, but I should be able to hit about 80 kg/176 lbs with a royal pause if today's preliminary testing is anything to go by. A year ago I would have been good for 105 kg/231 lbs, but it's a decent start.
I
plan to will train Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays at least initially. With the meet in two weeks and a need to ease into it, I won't start a serious program until after the meet. What I will do is to start working on especially upper back/shoulder flexibility to ensure that I am ready for the Olympic work starting early/mid March while doing some low-volume/medium intensity lifting.
I will also try to get 6 hours of sleep or more most nights. I say most nights, because the occasional meet release or programming epiphany into the wee hours will happen. My daughter has been getting up at 5:20am for the past week due to more budding teeth, but other than that, the nights have gotten quite good of late. It's ironic that the kids only sleep like babies when they no longer are... but we are ever so thankful for that!
While I may update more often from time to time, I will mostly update once a week. I hope this will strike a good balance between not taking too much time away from the programming and Virtualmeet.net related correspondence and having the journal serve its purpose. The secondary reason is that with
my history of powerlifting blogging, I know that I am in trouble if I am expected to just write down what I did each workout. So expect a bit of narrative, once a week. Hopefully much shorter than this.
Enough said.
First encounter: military bench baseline and easy accessory workWith the exception of a brief feeler on the military bench press for the meet, I took it quite easy.
Military bench press, 2 second pause: up to 3 @ 60 kg/132 lbs, 1 @ 70 kg/154 lbs, near miss @ 80 kg/176 kg
Lying cable rows in pulldown machine: 15 @ 50 kg/110 lbs, 15 @ 60 kg/ 132 lbs, 12 @ 60 kg/ 132 lbs
Close-grip bench, fat bar: 10 @ bar, 6x2 @ 60 kg/132 lbs
Hammer curls, back supported: 12 @ 12.5 kg/28 lbs, 10 @ 15 kg/33 lbs
Cable L-flyes: 12 (right), 10 (left) @ ~10 kg/22 lbs
Before I fade out, here's one pic of "close, but no cigar" and the gym I will be spending the next 3 months in. It's a small but ever so charming facility with mostly older equipment (give or take some decades) located in a bomb shelter underneath the
Temppeliaukio church in Helsinki, Finland. At some stage, I'll probably head back to
our local powerlifting mecca though.