TIME FOR A GOOD SHOULDER PUMP
I
don't know about you, but right now I need a jolt. I need to go
to the gym, get slammed around and deliberately remind myself of
why I'm here. Time again to purchase some pain and endure the sore.
This happens every year around now, and I'm not alone. A moldy,
airborne apathy seeps into the gym, permeates my mood and workouts,
has me hesitant, weak-footed and tentative. This is not tolerable.
Upon reluctance nothing good is built, to falter is to fail.
The
days are becoming shorter, colder and wetter. Leaves are falling,
frost trims familiar places in the early morning, birds are restless
and there are sales on tire chains and batteries, hooded sweatshirts
and boots, season lift tickets where no snow has fallen and some
nut down the street has illuminated his Christmas lights. We are
instinctively weaving our cocoon. Most of us withdraw and busily
prepare for hibernation until our shadows once again cast boldly
before us.
Training
energy commonly subsides with the summer's end, the fall's tranquil
pre-storm softness and the anticipation of winter's black and white
holiday-impregnated largeness. It is definitely the right time for
a fall workout jolt; a charge to assist us in maintaining high energy
and spirit, based on courage, adventure and a dauntless brow. A
stray from routine to position us on higher ground: to pause, review
and prepare our winter training strategy.
Let's
cut loose over the next weeks with an occasional blast to vent our
rebellious nature, make some space and ascertain the direction we
should go this winter. By all means, let's keep going with spark
and enthusiasm, nothing less.
Try
this shoulder/back/lat combination that taps into the bis and tris
as well. It's a giant set of 5 movements done as if they were one.
This doesn't imply hurry or haste. This is not a complex, frantic,
unconnected scramble. These carefully chosen exercises are cooperative
and can be performed fluidly and powerfully if you know them and
yourself well. Walk through the sequence in your mind to determine
your path, to approximate the weight to be used and understand the
logic of the muscular flow and reinforcement.
Choose
a weight where ten reps per set can be performed on the first cycle.
No rest between sets, only the comfortable time it takes to move
from X to X, secure a grip, deep breath, focus and go. Between each
giant set take a gulp of water, three deep breaths and move. Chances
are you'll be energized, warmed up, psyched and ten reps per set
will sustain through set two. Subsequent sets will see the reps
drop as you soldier on. That's okay. It's all okay as long as you
persist one hundred percent, seek intensity to near failure without
sacrificing form - always form - and gratefully embrace the pump,
scorn the burn.
Exercise
sequence
4
giant sets X 10, 10, 8, 6 (+/-) reps
Press Behind
Neck (PBN)
Pulldowns
Shrug
Pullover
Bentover
Lateral Raise
Exercise
Descriptions
Big
breath - big psyche. Start with the Press Behind Neck, back supported
with a belt and the seat back of a utility bench. Position yourself
so the bar of a Smith Press grazes the back of your head without
jutting your head forward. The reps should be performed with a sure
pace and abbreviated range of motion; that is, complete only the
mid-range of the pressing motion without maximum extension or contraction.
This rep execution saturates the upper back ridges, full deltoid
area and the outer triceps, giving you the sense of one continual
breathless rep. High level pump and burn result. Low volume, throaty
growls are fitting for both men and women.
Slide
over to the pulldown machine. Use a medium grip to match PBN hand
position and situate yourself slightly forward of the overhead pulley.
Now repeat a similar partial range of action to direct resistance
to the upper back muscles, rear delt, biceps and lat. This is best
achieved by deliberate isolation of this region by pretending you
are onstage, before the judges and instructed to hit a back pose.
Contract up and down smoothly, tightly, rhythmically. 8 to 10 reps,
final burn and move on.
The
dumbbell shrug is for muscle weaving and posture restoration. Stand
erect with dumbbells of an appealing, moderate weight, shoulders
back, head high, lats flexed, gut in. Smile. Now, slightly bend
the knees, stoop imperceptibly forward allowing the dumbbells to
drop some four inches as you release your traps and softly round
the back. Pull the dumbbells up high with all your might, shoulders
to ears and roll them to the fully erect starting position. Confidently
flex the entire system as if ready to salute. Repeat with flourish
until the end.
On
to the straight arm pullover for relief, re-oxygenating and diverse
muscle building. Stiff arm pullover - one of my all time favorites
for the good feel of the big stretch. It's primarily a lat movement
with a bit of peripheral minor pec, longitudinal bi & tri, shoulder
rotation and abs. The pullover offers relief after a tough dumbbell
incline or flat press, keeps pump/heart rate going, keeps you active,
warmed and timed. Lay the length of the bench, head supported at
the very end and the feet up.... starting position is DB straight
overhead - slowly lowering with a tight negative to body-in-line
position (plus a tad or two as you warm and stretch) and back overhead.
Palms should be flat on the plate with DB handle snug against the
web of the hands.
Restored,
you now stand before a pair of iron knuckle-busters. Greedily pull
in some oxygen, wipe the sweat from your brow, bend over and firmly
grasp the dumbbells. Bend your knees and rest your ribcage as best
you can on your quads to protect fatiguing erectors from overload.
Allow the dumbbells to hang palms facing each other and with the
body tight, pull the dumbbells high and out to a position even with
or above your flattened back. Contract the rear delts; concentrate
on the negative return and repeat. Go two reps per one breath. Done.
This
is tough and for men and women with hard hats only. No sheep, no
turkeys. Surely a combination with its character and personality
is well worth knowing.
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