Quote: (10-21-2015 08:33 AM)H1N1 Wrote:
Solid advice from Hannibal (I seem to be following you around today dude!).
I'm not a massive fan of convict conditioning, it seems mostly like a marketing ploy to me. If you're serious about calisthenics, I'd check out the gymnastic bodies forum, or get your hands on Never Gymless by Ross Enemait.
I've been doing a gymnastics based training program for months now, and it has transformed my body. I have made far better gains aesthetically, and far faster strength progress than I ever did with weights.If you hit it hard and push yourself to progress, then you can still see great results.
I second H1N1's advice. Convict Conditioning, although full of good information, is basically two things: a workout program with very minimal equipment (no excuses!) and a whole lot of propaganda for bodyweight exercise. It's a good introduction, but if you want to make some serious gains with it, I recommend checking out how barstarzz or gymnasts train and adapting your approach that way. TooFineaPoint has a good CC routine outlined, as well.
I know this is a lot of information, but it's better that you know now what kind of work it's going to take than to do CC to the letter for three months, get nowhere, and quit in frustration. You cannot expect your gains to be linear, your body is not going to grow by 1 rep a week/month/whatever, and you're only fucking yourself over if you do wall pushups for four months straight starting at the beginner standard when you could have easily tested out of it and worked up to full pushups.
If you want to do CC, I recommend trying to pass the progression standard
right now, and if you can't then work on the exercise. If you can, there's no point in undertraining yourself.
Do not be scared to push yourself forward..
I have always been skeptical of Paul Wade because no one knows what he looks like and there isn't a community of huge, jacked motherfuckers who did CC to the letter. It's been out for 6 years. Everyone who does do it and has had success
has their own routine, and surprise surprise, they hit each lift
at least twice a week for more than 2 sets.
![[Image: tumblr_n561ygPJFn1qenyljo1_1280.jpg]](https://41.media.tumblr.com/7e8e0b68c71e4999b3c23be5c6ea0a39/tumblr_n561ygPJFn1qenyljo1_1280.jpg)
The reason why I bring up barstarzz is because they don't have much of a plan, they just have a desire to succeed. You said you wanted to save money for a gym member ship and if it's aesthetics without having to think too hard, this is a good way to go.
As you can tell from the picture, they have an enviable physique compared to your average gymbro and they don't even have a gym membership. Most barstarzz don't have a set workout program either, they literally go to the park and mess around on the monkey bars for an hour a day.
Basic general advice is to do as many pushups, pullups and dips in a workout as you possibly can. You can do this however you want, what I said earlier works too if you want more structure. There's lots of good advice in this thread already.
A gymnastic routine tends to focus moreso on progressively making exercises harder through a disadvantage in leverage. The difference between a pushup and a pseudoplanche pushup is a good example. Gymnasts get pretty fucking strong. A double bodyweight bench press is not uncommon for a high level gymnast and they don't even bench. Gymnastics is what I recommend if it's strength your'e looking for. If you want to do it on a budget send me a PM.
The best part about calisthenics is that it's all about relative strength. You can go on a cut and lose absolute strength, but if your pullups went from 10 reps to 12 (because you dropped 6 lbs),
you got stronger. This keeps motivation high and encourages "lean bulking". You might not build as much muscle as fast, but it's a great approach to stay fucking ripped year round.
The takeaway message here is this: There are many, many different ways to develop a fitness routine. What's more important is your consistency over time. Don't be scared to try something new, but absolutely commit to a program and give it your all for at least six weeks, if not twelve. Pick something and stick with it. Increase your reps, your sets (or total volume), the difficulty of the exercise, or some combination of the three. Simple works.
@H1N1
Are you doing Foundation 1 + Handstand 1? I did Foundation 1 for about eight months and yeah, I have nothing but good things to say about it. Integrated mobility is fucking brilliant. The rep ranges are also very intelligently put together (he starts you off with higher rep ranges to build muscle, then lowers it to 5x5 to build muscle and strength with the harder exercise variants).
@TooFineaPoint
You should check out CC3. He came out with an explosive calisthenics book. It's actually pretty good. The majority of your explosive work is plyo pushups and plyo jumps, but there's some other cool shit in there.