I just received my Certified Kettlebell Instructor (CKI) certificate from the Association of Tactical Strength and Conditioning Instructors. Like everything Nico Rithner does, it's first class! I'm proud of the hard work that went into my certification process, and thankful for the treatment Nico gave all the candidates. His certification featured kettlebell lifting at its finest, with applications for kettlebell sport, strength and conditioning for tactical or sporting purposes, and specialized applications. His material covered exercise physiology, biomechanics, injury prevention, program planning, and hands-on instruction in numerous lifts. I've been lifting weights for years, and lifting kettlebells since 2006, but this weekend tied together all my training and study into a coherent system of thought. There are many good certification programs out there for kettlebell instructors, and based on my experience, I'd put the ATSCI certification right up there with the best of them. It's the only one I know that that is accredited for continuing education credits from the American Council on Exercise, the National Academy of Sports Medicine, and the National Strength and Conditioning Association.
One man's quest for strength and health through lifting and teaching kettlebells.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Lessons Learned
In this post, I want to record my reflections on my Kettlebell Instructor certification weekend in Denver. I'm ruminating over lessons learned, as as they take shape, I'll record them here.
The first thing that I have realized is that I'm plenty strong. I've spent my time under heavy weights, have developed full body strength. I can deadlift double bodyweight, bent press 70% of my bodyweight overhead with one hand, and clean and jerk a barbell overhead that weighs as much as I do. I can do one arm pushups and one legged squats for reps. These numbers would not be impressive in a powerlifting or weightlifting meet, but they are much better than the average man on the street. I could certainly be stronger, but for my sport, I'm more than strong enough. So what's my problem?
My problem is that I've been training to my strengths, rather than my weaknesses. My back is strong enough that I can snatch a kettlebell without driving it with my legs; my arms are strong enough that I can jerk without full hip and ankle extension. My grip is strong enough to cast a kettlebell away from my body in a wide arc and catch it without scooping. In other words, I'm strong enough to cheat. I have gotten away with inefficient technique, because I could muscle through. Nico Rithner watched me snatch, and he said "You are snatching way too hard." That worked fine for the 16k/35lb. and 20k/44lb. kettlebells- I breezed through three rank levels in the snatch with the 20k in a month. Then I hit a wall with the 24k, because it's heavy. With this weight, strong enough is not good enough. I'd have to be a lot stronger to muscle the 24k for the reps I need for rank. Even if I did, the 32k/70lb. kettlebell is waiting for me, and there is no way to manhandle the red kettlebell for over 50 reps per arm. I want Master of Sport, which means I have to master that weight. I can't dominate it- I have to finesse it. Perfect technique, with just the right amount of force.
Here is what I mean. This is Jonny Benidze. This kid is about 20 years old, and weighs about 135 pounds. I'm way bigger than this guy, and can probably press and deadlift more than he can. But he can jerk two 70 pound kettlebells 124 times in ten minutes. Know how many times I can do that? 10. Maybe 12. So how can a guy 40 pounds lighter than me do 12 times the work I can? Because he is powerful and efficient, not just strong. In kettlebell sport, strong enough is not good enough.
So what's my prescription? Technique, technique, technique! I need to slow down, and take the time to develop efficient movement. More time with lighter weights. In an earlier post, I vowed to make rank II by the end of October. Scratch that. I'll take as much time as I need developing technique and endurance to complement my strenth, so that when I do make that rank, it won't be by overpowering the kettlebell through inefficient technique, but by performing 106 efficient, technically correct reps. It will be a beautiful set. And it will prepare me for the next level. Because sometimes being stronger is just a shortcut. And there are no shortcuts.
The first thing that I have realized is that I'm plenty strong. I've spent my time under heavy weights, have developed full body strength. I can deadlift double bodyweight, bent press 70% of my bodyweight overhead with one hand, and clean and jerk a barbell overhead that weighs as much as I do. I can do one arm pushups and one legged squats for reps. These numbers would not be impressive in a powerlifting or weightlifting meet, but they are much better than the average man on the street. I could certainly be stronger, but for my sport, I'm more than strong enough. So what's my problem?
My problem is that I've been training to my strengths, rather than my weaknesses. My back is strong enough that I can snatch a kettlebell without driving it with my legs; my arms are strong enough that I can jerk without full hip and ankle extension. My grip is strong enough to cast a kettlebell away from my body in a wide arc and catch it without scooping. In other words, I'm strong enough to cheat. I have gotten away with inefficient technique, because I could muscle through. Nico Rithner watched me snatch, and he said "You are snatching way too hard." That worked fine for the 16k/35lb. and 20k/44lb. kettlebells- I breezed through three rank levels in the snatch with the 20k in a month. Then I hit a wall with the 24k, because it's heavy. With this weight, strong enough is not good enough. I'd have to be a lot stronger to muscle the 24k for the reps I need for rank. Even if I did, the 32k/70lb. kettlebell is waiting for me, and there is no way to manhandle the red kettlebell for over 50 reps per arm. I want Master of Sport, which means I have to master that weight. I can't dominate it- I have to finesse it. Perfect technique, with just the right amount of force.
Here is what I mean. This is Jonny Benidze. This kid is about 20 years old, and weighs about 135 pounds. I'm way bigger than this guy, and can probably press and deadlift more than he can. But he can jerk two 70 pound kettlebells 124 times in ten minutes. Know how many times I can do that? 10. Maybe 12. So how can a guy 40 pounds lighter than me do 12 times the work I can? Because he is powerful and efficient, not just strong. In kettlebell sport, strong enough is not good enough.
So what's my prescription? Technique, technique, technique! I need to slow down, and take the time to develop efficient movement. More time with lighter weights. In an earlier post, I vowed to make rank II by the end of October. Scratch that. I'll take as much time as I need developing technique and endurance to complement my strenth, so that when I do make that rank, it won't be by overpowering the kettlebell through inefficient technique, but by performing 106 efficient, technically correct reps. It will be a beautiful set. And it will prepare me for the next level. Because sometimes being stronger is just a shortcut. And there are no shortcuts.
Monday, October 10, 2011
Kettlebell Instructor Certification
This weekend was one of the longest weekends of my life, but also one of the most rewarding. On Friday, I flew to Denver, Colorado, to attend a kettlebell instructor certification seminar hosted by Nico Rithner, of the Association of Tactical Strength and Conditioning Instructors. Nico has a great hardcore gym in Denver, with kettlebells, barbells, ropes, suspension units, rowers, grippers, hammers, and all kinds of great stuff. When I first arrived on Friday, I just walked around the gym for about an hour, playing with different toys. Then, that evening, we had a training session. I practiced some kettlebell lifts and calisthenics, and met some really nice people. I got to practice my clean and jerk on a real platform with bumper plates without fear of dropping the weights, and that was great. We played around with partial deadlifts, and with an atlas stone trainer. When you walk into Nico's gym, you can feel the atmosphere- it makes you want to lift!
Saturday morning, we gathered for the seminar. There was Nico and his assistant, Jordan, as well as Dave, a training sargeant at the academy; Justin, a local triathlete and personal trainer; Elizabeth, a massage therapist from Virginia; Kindle, an exercise physiologist from Pittsburgh; and Charlee, a police officer. Did I mention that Charlee is a world-class Judoka who won the Pan-American Games and competed in the 2004 Athens Olympics? Yeah. It sounded like the beginning of a bad joke: a drill sargeant, an olympian, a triathlete, two personal trainers and a theologian walk into a gym.... It was a little intimidating to be training in a room full of people who are among the very best in their fields, trained, educated, and proven among their peers. However, I knew that this would simply raise the bar in the standard of training, and make the seminar even better.
After introductions, we got down to business. The seminar was held at the Colorado State Patrol Academy. We started with a lecture by an exercise physiologist about injury prevention, and learned about self-myofascial release with foam rollers. Peter Van Doren gave a great lecture with PowerPoint slides, and as I listened to him and furiously took notes, a lot of things came together for me- I learned why I have pain in certain places, and how to correct it. That lecture alone would have been worth the trip to Colorado, but there was more!
After the injury prevention session, we got down to the business of lifting kettlebells, and did not stop until lunch time on Sunday. It rained and snowed on Saturday, so we lifted indoors, working on the basics, the sport lifts (snatch and jerk), all varieties of planks, pulls, explosive lifts, balance exercises, bridges, presses- you name it. The instruction was detailed, but it was organized in a way that the material flowed from one concept to another. No one got lost in a sea of information, because the applicability of one concept to another was immediately evident.
Saturday consisted of a full seven hours of lifting, and I wanted nothing more than to eat and rest. So, Nico and I picked up a movie and some Mediteranean food, and headed back, to his place. I got to meet his girlfriend, Anna, who is a really nice lady. We ate and chilled, then got a night of sleep.
Sunday started with the instructional test. Each candidate had to instruct Nico or his assistant, Jordan, on the basics of kettlebell lifting, including technique, safety, terminology, etc. It's not enough to be able to lift a kettlebell- this weekend was about teaching others to lift. After the instructional test, we took the fitness portion of the test. This test was deceptively simple: choose a lift, choose a kettlebell, and try to complete a ten minute set, with one hand switch, just like the sport of American Rules kettlebell lifting.
I'm already ranked in the snatch, so I have already hit the necessary numbers with the 20k/44lb. kettlebell. I've been training with the 24k/53lb. kettlebell, and have hit 95 reps. To rank, I needed 106. So, when my time came, I tightened my shoes, snugged up my wrist wraps, and began to lift. Today would be my day. Today, 106 reps would fall. Everyone would see it. After I made rank, they would pick me up on their shoulders and carry me through the State Patrol Academy. Confetti would fall from the ceiling, and adoring crowds would gather around. Or not.
After Saturday's lifting schedule, my grip was not recovered enough to snatch, so my left hand gave out just 32 reps into my set. My right hand was good for 44 more, for a total of 76 reps. In terms of making rank, it was an epic fail, but all things considered, it was a decent set. Everyone else did really great on the fitness test, and most other candidates earned a new rank, so there was a lot of energy in the room. Everyone affirmed and encouraged everyone else, just as we should.
After these tests, we took the kettlebells outside and trained windmills, get ups, and juggling in the grass and rabbit poop (a little rabbit poop never hurt anyone!). Then off to lunch at Whole Foods Market, then back for the final afternoon session. This session was about programming- designing workouts to reach our goals not simply for the short term, but for the long haul. I took a lot of notes, and brought home a lot to think about. This was one of my weakest areas, and is probably the reason I don't hold a higher rank than I do now. I need to learn to formulate the right plan, stick to it, and know when and how to deviate from it to take me where I want to go. Sunday afternoon's sessions gave me a lot to chew on in this regard.
Sunday night, Nico took us all to a great Argentinian restaurant for pizza and gelato, then off to the airport. I was wheels up at 1:00 a.m. Denver time, which my body thought was really 3:00 a.m., North Carolina time (did I mention I go to bed at 9:00, usually?). When I arrived home, my family was waiting for me at the airport. Lots of hugs and kisses from my favorite people, then off to the IHOP for a well-deserved breakfast. We came home, and Dawn quited the house for me so that I could get a little sleep before getting to work.
In a day or so,when I've had time to process the training and information to a greater extent, I'll prepare another post, discussing how I think that this certification will help me as an athlete and as a teacher. In the mean time, I'm just trying to recover from it!
Saturday morning, we gathered for the seminar. There was Nico and his assistant, Jordan, as well as Dave, a training sargeant at the academy; Justin, a local triathlete and personal trainer; Elizabeth, a massage therapist from Virginia; Kindle, an exercise physiologist from Pittsburgh; and Charlee, a police officer. Did I mention that Charlee is a world-class Judoka who won the Pan-American Games and competed in the 2004 Athens Olympics? Yeah. It sounded like the beginning of a bad joke: a drill sargeant, an olympian, a triathlete, two personal trainers and a theologian walk into a gym.... It was a little intimidating to be training in a room full of people who are among the very best in their fields, trained, educated, and proven among their peers. However, I knew that this would simply raise the bar in the standard of training, and make the seminar even better.
After introductions, we got down to business. The seminar was held at the Colorado State Patrol Academy. We started with a lecture by an exercise physiologist about injury prevention, and learned about self-myofascial release with foam rollers. Peter Van Doren gave a great lecture with PowerPoint slides, and as I listened to him and furiously took notes, a lot of things came together for me- I learned why I have pain in certain places, and how to correct it. That lecture alone would have been worth the trip to Colorado, but there was more!
After the injury prevention session, we got down to the business of lifting kettlebells, and did not stop until lunch time on Sunday. It rained and snowed on Saturday, so we lifted indoors, working on the basics, the sport lifts (snatch and jerk), all varieties of planks, pulls, explosive lifts, balance exercises, bridges, presses- you name it. The instruction was detailed, but it was organized in a way that the material flowed from one concept to another. No one got lost in a sea of information, because the applicability of one concept to another was immediately evident.
Saturday consisted of a full seven hours of lifting, and I wanted nothing more than to eat and rest. So, Nico and I picked up a movie and some Mediteranean food, and headed back, to his place. I got to meet his girlfriend, Anna, who is a really nice lady. We ate and chilled, then got a night of sleep.
Sunday started with the instructional test. Each candidate had to instruct Nico or his assistant, Jordan, on the basics of kettlebell lifting, including technique, safety, terminology, etc. It's not enough to be able to lift a kettlebell- this weekend was about teaching others to lift. After the instructional test, we took the fitness portion of the test. This test was deceptively simple: choose a lift, choose a kettlebell, and try to complete a ten minute set, with one hand switch, just like the sport of American Rules kettlebell lifting.
I'm already ranked in the snatch, so I have already hit the necessary numbers with the 20k/44lb. kettlebell. I've been training with the 24k/53lb. kettlebell, and have hit 95 reps. To rank, I needed 106. So, when my time came, I tightened my shoes, snugged up my wrist wraps, and began to lift. Today would be my day. Today, 106 reps would fall. Everyone would see it. After I made rank, they would pick me up on their shoulders and carry me through the State Patrol Academy. Confetti would fall from the ceiling, and adoring crowds would gather around. Or not.
After Saturday's lifting schedule, my grip was not recovered enough to snatch, so my left hand gave out just 32 reps into my set. My right hand was good for 44 more, for a total of 76 reps. In terms of making rank, it was an epic fail, but all things considered, it was a decent set. Everyone else did really great on the fitness test, and most other candidates earned a new rank, so there was a lot of energy in the room. Everyone affirmed and encouraged everyone else, just as we should.
After these tests, we took the kettlebells outside and trained windmills, get ups, and juggling in the grass and rabbit poop (a little rabbit poop never hurt anyone!). Then off to lunch at Whole Foods Market, then back for the final afternoon session. This session was about programming- designing workouts to reach our goals not simply for the short term, but for the long haul. I took a lot of notes, and brought home a lot to think about. This was one of my weakest areas, and is probably the reason I don't hold a higher rank than I do now. I need to learn to formulate the right plan, stick to it, and know when and how to deviate from it to take me where I want to go. Sunday afternoon's sessions gave me a lot to chew on in this regard.
Sunday night, Nico took us all to a great Argentinian restaurant for pizza and gelato, then off to the airport. I was wheels up at 1:00 a.m. Denver time, which my body thought was really 3:00 a.m., North Carolina time (did I mention I go to bed at 9:00, usually?). When I arrived home, my family was waiting for me at the airport. Lots of hugs and kisses from my favorite people, then off to the IHOP for a well-deserved breakfast. We came home, and Dawn quited the house for me so that I could get a little sleep before getting to work.
In a day or so,when I've had time to process the training and information to a greater extent, I'll prepare another post, discussing how I think that this certification will help me as an athlete and as a teacher. In the mean time, I'm just trying to recover from it!
Monday, October 3, 2011
October Training Log
Friday, October 28- Snatches: 10 minutes with the 24k. Switched hands every 5 reps, and did not count reps. Kept a consistent pace of about 14 rpm, for a total of about 140 reps.
Thursday, October 27- Snatches: 8 minutes @ 16rpm, 16k. 128 snatches. Steadily working toward 100/100. One day per week, I'll practice 24k snatches, switching hands every 5 reps, to keep strength and the groove of the competition bell, since my 16k is a cast iron kettlebell. When I reach 200 snatches with the 16k kettlebell, I'll take a few days off, and test with the 24k, with a goal of at least 106 reps for rank II.
Wednesday, October 26- Jerks: 6 minutes @ 8rpm, 2x16k. Previously, have done 8 minutes at this pace, but my shoulders gave out this time. Rack position felt uncomfortable. May go back to 10 minutes @ 6rpm, and spend more time in the rack. Played around with pistol squats. In the evening, performed Turkish get ups: 1 per arm with 16k, 20k, 24k, 28k, 32k.
Tuesday, October 25- busy day, so just a quick workout: 10 minutes of snatches, 16k, @14 rpm. 70 snatches per arm. Continuing to progress steadily toward 100/100 in 10 minutes. Working on technique, specifically, casting, scooping, and grip endurance.
Monday, October 24- day off from training
Sunday, October 23- Double long cycle: 4 minutes @ 4rpm, 2x20k; Double jerk: 2 minutes @ 6 rpm, 24k; One arm long cycle: 10 minutes @ 6 rpm, 24k, one hand switch (30 reps per arm); 2 minutes @ 10rpm, 32k; right arm one arm long cycle: 5 minutes @12 rpm, 20k (60 reps with one arm). Did 1 minute with left arm, but felt tightness in my left thoracic region from yesterday's barrel lifting, so I'll have to make up this side in a day or two.
Saturday, October 22- tried a timed set of jerks with 2x20k; went 5 minutes @ 8rpm, for 41 reps. Spent about an hour playing with a 15 gallon barrel of water. Half full (60 pounds): presses, shoulders, carries, squats. Full (120 pounds): loaded on a table 19 times. Felt it all over the next day!
Friday, October 21- day off from training. Wanted to lift, but the day took a different turn.
Thursday, October 20- day off from training.
Wednesday, October 19- Jerk: 8 minutes @8rpm 16k (64 reps). Feeling sore from yesterday's workout, particularly in legs and triceps. Jerks were a challenge in these regions, but not in cardio or overall stamina. Snatch: 8 minutes @ 14 rpm, 16k (112 reps). Heavy snatch: 24k- 2 minutes @18 rpm. Heavy jerk: 2x24k- 1m @ 10 rpm. Double clean drop set: 5x32k, 5x24k, 5x20k, 5x16k. Played around with bottoms up presses, see-saw presses, 16k.
Tuesday, October 18- Tuesday is my busy day each week, so no kettlebell sport training. 5 minutes of pushups; 5 minutes of pistols, alternating legs; 5 minutes of pullups, varying grips; 5 minutes of jumping jacks. As many as possible, resting when necessary, did not count reps.
Monday, October 17- Snatch: 10 minutes @12 rpm, 16k (120 reps); Jerk: 10 minutes @ 6 rpm, 16k (60 reps). Threw the medicine ball with Dorian.
Sunday, October 16- Jerk: 8 minutes @ 6rpm, 16k (48 reps)
Saturday, October 15- day off
Friday, October 14- Snatch: 10 minutes @10rpm, 16k, one hand switch (100 reps).
Thursday, October 13- Day off from kettlebell sport training. 2 sets of five presses per arm, 24k. A few windmills and gladiators, 16k. Practiced my poomse Taebaek several times throughout the day- nothing too vigorous. Very light/rest day.
Wednesday, October 12- Warm up. Snatch: 12 minutes @8rpm, 16k, one hand switch (96 reps). Double jerk: 10 minutes @ 4rpm, 2x16k (40 reps). I'm working up my volume to possibly do the "100 reps in 10 minutes" plan from Nico Rithner's book Essentials of Kettlebell Lifting. This is basically escalating density training. The program starts with 16 minutes of jerks at 4 rpm, and works up to 10 minutes at 10 rpm. I'm working up to this length of time. The rack position is holding me back at this pace in the jerk, and time in the lockout is my weakness in the snatch. But it's time to stop training to my strengths and hiding from my weaknesses. I may try to reach 100 reps in the jerk (and 100 per arm in the snatch) with the 16k before coming back to the 24k. I'm doing it with two mismatched cast iron kettlebells, but the point is to master technique while building endurance, so I really need to get two 16k competition kettlebells. Perhaps I'll sell my old treadmill....
Tuesday, October 11- Warm up. Snatch: 10 minutes @8rpm, 16k, one hand switch (80 reps). Double jerk: 9 minutes @ 4 rpm, 2x16k (36 reps).
Monday, October 10- Flew out of Denver at 1:00 a.m. Got to Charlotte at 6:00 a.m., home by 8 a.m. Slept till noon- no training.
Sunday, October 9- Lifted half day at ATSCI cert.
Saturday, October 8- Lifted all day at ATSCI kettlebell cert.
Friday, October 7, Travelled to Denver. Did some odd lifting at Nico Rithner's gym. Kettlebell technique practice. Partial deadlifts- 5x4 @ 225. Atlas stone trainer- about 150 pounds. 5 or 6 lifts, carries. Barbell Clean and Jerk- 135 pounds x 5 singles.
Thursday, October 6- Day off from training.
Wednesday, October 5- tight, stiff lower back. 1 hour walk with Dawn, then no other training today.
Tuesday, October 4- 1 hour walk with Dawn; practice bodyweight exercises- One Arm Pushups, pistols, hand stand pushups. Flexibility training.
Monday, October 3- kettlebell snatch light day. Focus on grip endurance with 16k/36lb. with long sets. 100 snatches (50 snatches, 50 half-snatches) left, then right. Walked with Dawn for an hour- ran at a moderate pace for 5-10 minutes with Dorian. Stretching in the evening.
October 1 and 2- rested from kettlebell work, but practiced bodyweight work: practiced one arm pushups and pistols, pullups, neck bridges. Stretched.
Thursday, October 27- Snatches: 8 minutes @ 16rpm, 16k. 128 snatches. Steadily working toward 100/100. One day per week, I'll practice 24k snatches, switching hands every 5 reps, to keep strength and the groove of the competition bell, since my 16k is a cast iron kettlebell. When I reach 200 snatches with the 16k kettlebell, I'll take a few days off, and test with the 24k, with a goal of at least 106 reps for rank II.
Wednesday, October 26- Jerks: 6 minutes @ 8rpm, 2x16k. Previously, have done 8 minutes at this pace, but my shoulders gave out this time. Rack position felt uncomfortable. May go back to 10 minutes @ 6rpm, and spend more time in the rack. Played around with pistol squats. In the evening, performed Turkish get ups: 1 per arm with 16k, 20k, 24k, 28k, 32k.
Tuesday, October 25- busy day, so just a quick workout: 10 minutes of snatches, 16k, @14 rpm. 70 snatches per arm. Continuing to progress steadily toward 100/100 in 10 minutes. Working on technique, specifically, casting, scooping, and grip endurance.
Monday, October 24- day off from training
Sunday, October 23- Double long cycle: 4 minutes @ 4rpm, 2x20k; Double jerk: 2 minutes @ 6 rpm, 24k; One arm long cycle: 10 minutes @ 6 rpm, 24k, one hand switch (30 reps per arm); 2 minutes @ 10rpm, 32k; right arm one arm long cycle: 5 minutes @12 rpm, 20k (60 reps with one arm). Did 1 minute with left arm, but felt tightness in my left thoracic region from yesterday's barrel lifting, so I'll have to make up this side in a day or two.
Saturday, October 22- tried a timed set of jerks with 2x20k; went 5 minutes @ 8rpm, for 41 reps. Spent about an hour playing with a 15 gallon barrel of water. Half full (60 pounds): presses, shoulders, carries, squats. Full (120 pounds): loaded on a table 19 times. Felt it all over the next day!
Friday, October 21- day off from training. Wanted to lift, but the day took a different turn.
Thursday, October 20- day off from training.
Wednesday, October 19- Jerk: 8 minutes @8rpm 16k (64 reps). Feeling sore from yesterday's workout, particularly in legs and triceps. Jerks were a challenge in these regions, but not in cardio or overall stamina. Snatch: 8 minutes @ 14 rpm, 16k (112 reps). Heavy snatch: 24k- 2 minutes @18 rpm. Heavy jerk: 2x24k- 1m @ 10 rpm. Double clean drop set: 5x32k, 5x24k, 5x20k, 5x16k. Played around with bottoms up presses, see-saw presses, 16k.
Tuesday, October 18- Tuesday is my busy day each week, so no kettlebell sport training. 5 minutes of pushups; 5 minutes of pistols, alternating legs; 5 minutes of pullups, varying grips; 5 minutes of jumping jacks. As many as possible, resting when necessary, did not count reps.
Monday, October 17- Snatch: 10 minutes @12 rpm, 16k (120 reps); Jerk: 10 minutes @ 6 rpm, 16k (60 reps). Threw the medicine ball with Dorian.
Sunday, October 16- Jerk: 8 minutes @ 6rpm, 16k (48 reps)
Saturday, October 15- day off
Friday, October 14- Snatch: 10 minutes @10rpm, 16k, one hand switch (100 reps).
Thursday, October 13- Day off from kettlebell sport training. 2 sets of five presses per arm, 24k. A few windmills and gladiators, 16k. Practiced my poomse Taebaek several times throughout the day- nothing too vigorous. Very light/rest day.
Wednesday, October 12- Warm up. Snatch: 12 minutes @8rpm, 16k, one hand switch (96 reps). Double jerk: 10 minutes @ 4rpm, 2x16k (40 reps). I'm working up my volume to possibly do the "100 reps in 10 minutes" plan from Nico Rithner's book Essentials of Kettlebell Lifting. This is basically escalating density training. The program starts with 16 minutes of jerks at 4 rpm, and works up to 10 minutes at 10 rpm. I'm working up to this length of time. The rack position is holding me back at this pace in the jerk, and time in the lockout is my weakness in the snatch. But it's time to stop training to my strengths and hiding from my weaknesses. I may try to reach 100 reps in the jerk (and 100 per arm in the snatch) with the 16k before coming back to the 24k. I'm doing it with two mismatched cast iron kettlebells, but the point is to master technique while building endurance, so I really need to get two 16k competition kettlebells. Perhaps I'll sell my old treadmill....
Tuesday, October 11- Warm up. Snatch: 10 minutes @8rpm, 16k, one hand switch (80 reps). Double jerk: 9 minutes @ 4 rpm, 2x16k (36 reps).
Monday, October 10- Flew out of Denver at 1:00 a.m. Got to Charlotte at 6:00 a.m., home by 8 a.m. Slept till noon- no training.
Sunday, October 9- Lifted half day at ATSCI cert.
Saturday, October 8- Lifted all day at ATSCI kettlebell cert.
Friday, October 7, Travelled to Denver. Did some odd lifting at Nico Rithner's gym. Kettlebell technique practice. Partial deadlifts- 5x4 @ 225. Atlas stone trainer- about 150 pounds. 5 or 6 lifts, carries. Barbell Clean and Jerk- 135 pounds x 5 singles.
Thursday, October 6- Day off from training.
Wednesday, October 5- tight, stiff lower back. 1 hour walk with Dawn, then no other training today.
Tuesday, October 4- 1 hour walk with Dawn; practice bodyweight exercises- One Arm Pushups, pistols, hand stand pushups. Flexibility training.
Monday, October 3- kettlebell snatch light day. Focus on grip endurance with 16k/36lb. with long sets. 100 snatches (50 snatches, 50 half-snatches) left, then right. Walked with Dawn for an hour- ran at a moderate pace for 5-10 minutes with Dorian. Stretching in the evening.
October 1 and 2- rested from kettlebell work, but practiced bodyweight work: practiced one arm pushups and pistols, pullups, neck bridges. Stretched.
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