Monday, July 31, 2023

Public Chin Up Bar Update

Back in February I wrote a blog post about floods destroying the local pull up bars.  These were the only public chin up bars in the region.  I now have an update, so thought I would share.

The old broken fitness equipment has since been removed, leaving behind a sunken square with weeds and holes.  This made me think that the local council was not going to replace the broken fitness equipment.  

The local chin up bars have been removed

This is what was left of the chin up bars after the floods

Then I remembered council also had to replace the broken playground that was destroyed by the floods, and I vaguely remember someone saying something about them putting in new 'fitness equipment' there.  So I went to have a look at the new playground.

The new playground looks good.  Sadly, the new fitness equipment does not.  

Nothing there is overly useful, and there were no chin up bars.  Such a wasted opportunity.

The new fitness equipment

The new equipment, from the other direction

What a sad state our country is in when there are no longer any public chin up bars in the region.  

Earlier this year I did an exercise challenge where I completed 100+ pull ups per day for ten consecutive days.  I also did a pull up challenge over the month of May.  My son and I then did another challenge that we called 'the big hour' where we each completed over 100 strict pull ups in one hour.  Very few people in this country have ever achieved these things.  

There is no way people can train to be able to do these exercises unless they already own monkey bars or something similar.  This is not really possible for renters.  I am very lucky as I have monkey bars at home, and use them for many strength exercises, but there are a few things I would like to do that cannot be done using my monkey bars.  

I live in a country where over 2 out of every 3 people is overweight or obese.  Most of the 'fit' and 'strong' people that I see lack functional strength and just rely on their bulk.  Most have very low strength to weight ratio.  Many have low muscle tone.  If they had some way to train I can only imagine what they would be able to achieve.

Our councils dedicate money to improving health, but the money is all directed to the wrong areas.  Put in some chin up bars, allow people to train strength using body weight.  


Saturday, July 8, 2023

Kettlebell Get Up

I have been doing the kettlebell get up for some time now and thought I should write a blog post on it.

This exercise is often called a 'Turkish Get Up' or a 'Kettlebell Get Up' or much less frequently a "Russian Get Up".  It is great for whole body strengthening and conditioning.  My understanding is that even though it uses a Russian girya, it was Turkish wrestlers who originally developed this exercise.

I have a few old injuries that are causing increasing issues as I age.  I take prescription medication each day, as well as that I am allowed to take over the counter pain killers such as paracetamol when needed.  

My body started to degrade, so I decided to get stronger by doing body weight exercises.  This really helped, and for some time I was in far less pain and was more able to do everyday things.  Then inevitably, my body got older, and it started to degrade again.  I was in more and more pain, I was back to having days where my migraine would not ease off, and I was less able to do day-to-day things.  

I take my prescription as directed, and I often needed to take paracetamol once or twice during the day.  As time went on I was taking more and more paracetamol until it reached the point where I was taking the maximum safe dosage every day.  This reached a point where, often an hour or two before I could take my next dose, I was counting down the minutes and wishing time would hurry.  

This was a dreadful way to live, so I decided to try and change it.  I started doing kettlebell get ups.  They helped a lot.


I still do some body weight exercises each day, and some stretches, as well as doing GetUps.  I started doing one each side (two in total) with a very light weight.  I worked my way up to doing three each side (six in total) with a light weight.  Then I progressed to doing five per side (ten in total).  This only takes me five to ten minutes, and does not have to be completed in one go.  From here I have kept the number the same, and am gradually increasing the weight.  

Since doing Get Ups I no longer have many entire days of migraines.  I am in far less pain.  Most days I only take my prescription and don't need anything else.  That is a massive improvement to my quality of life.  

With a get-up, you move through a hip hinge, a knee-dominant move, and transforming a horizontal press into an isometric vertical press.  As the movement is unilateral, you are actively resisting rotation the whole time.  It’s rare that you get to practice so many cornerstone movements in a single rep of an exercise.  

Some benefits of doing Get Ups include:
  • Time under tension is significant when compared to other exercises
  • Involves many movements in one exercise
  • It targets many muscle groups in unison
  • Improves mobility and enhances the ability to do everyday tasks
  • Promotes cross lateralization (eg getting right brain to work with left side)
  • Promotes upper body stability
  • Promotes lower body stability
  • Enhances core strength and stability
  • Ties the right arm to the left leg, and left arm to the right leg (similar to martial arts)
  • Helps build balance
  • Promotes spatial awareness
  • Develops a front/back weight shift
  • Develops upper body strength, trunk strength, and hip strength
  • Retains and develops the ability of getting up from the floor (which is important as we age) 
  • Improves shoulder stability through different planes of motion and positions
  • Improves coordination
  • Helps to even out any movement asymmetries you might have
  • Has carryover into other sports like martial arts
I considered writing instructions on how to do a Get Up.  Pavel Tsatsouline provides excellent demonstration and instructions here (starting from about 15:04) and you are best going there and watching/rewatching this rather than me trying to paraphrase Pavel.  

With the GetUp there are some safety tips in there to take heed of.  They are all mentioned in Pavel's video.  I will stress that you must never do more than five consecutive reps per side, and never train to failure.  It is not hard to learn this as long as you start lighter than you think.  Many people start learning this skill with no weight, or using something super light such as a shoe.  Build up weight slowly, and all will be well.  

Once you have a kettlebell, you don't spend any more money to be able to do this.  Kettlebells are built tough, they should last a lifetime, so no need to buy replacements.  There are no gym fees, no membership fees, and no personal trainers.  It only takes 5 to 10 minutes spread through the day to do these, no travel time, no wasted time wasted getting into and out of gym clothes.  

To quote Pavel Tsatsouline: "the kettlebell is an ancient Russian weapon against weakness".  Be strong - byt' sil'nym (быть сильным).

Friday, June 30, 2023

1200 days of exercise ten things I learned

A few years ago I completed my first 30-day exercise challenge.  At that stage, just getting to and from the floor was hard, and doing any push ups was surprisingly difficult.  Back then I found sitting at my desk at work to be difficult, and just getting around the house was harder than it ought to be. 

During that challenge I had to complete a minimum of 100 push ups each day, and no less than 25 push ups per set.  No rest days, and no excuses.  I could exceed the minimums if I wanted, but this didn’t reduce the number I had to do the following day.  This was incredibly difficult, and was a great exercise challenge.

While I was unaware of it at the time, this was the start of something big for me.  

At the end of the challenge, I immediately began another 30-day challenge.  When that one finished I started another.  When that finished, another was started, I kept doing this, and I haven't stopped.

Push up handles

I kept notes of all my challenges, a while ago I realised that I reached day 1,200.  Considering that before I completed my first challenge I rarely did 2 consecutive days of exercise, this is momentous for me.  

I wrote the following list of ten things I learned from doing 1,200 consecutive days of exercise.  I considered writing a list of 1,200 things that I learned, but that seemed excessive, so I whittled it down.


Ten things I learned from 1,200 days of exercise:

  1. Push ups are hard and boring, they never get easier 
  2. Pull ups are hard, they never get easier 
  3. Planking is hard and stupid and boring, and so are squats 
  4. If I don’t have daily minimums, I will find an excuse not to do any exercise – ever 
  5. Most days are too cold, or too hot, or I have a headache, or I am in pain, or I am too busy, or I am too ill, or I am too tired from doing something else, or I don’t have time, or I am simply not in the mood for doing any exercise 
  6. Completing any short-term challenge (eg 1,000 push ups a day for two months) is both pointless and highly motivational 
  7. I have nothing for number seven 
  8. Most people in this country can’t do the minimums that I can do (because they don't train)  
  9. Most people could do vastly more than my minimums, and more than my maximum, if they could be bothered to train properly  
  10. Since starting these challenges, most days I am in far less pain than I used to be in, so even though the challenges are hard and boring and the exercises are stupid and I don’t want to do them, it is still worth doing them


I have a few injuries from years go that make me not want to do any exercise.  Given the amount of pain I was in every day prior to doing 30 day exercise challenges, and how much less pain I am in now, once I started these 30 day challenges I haven’t stopped.  

Once one challenge ends I immediately begin another.  Not all challenges work the same muscle groups.  Sometimes challenges are exactly the same as the precious challenge, other times they are entirely different.  There are no days when I do no exercise.

skinny fat kettlebell
Two of my giri


These challenges are very different from Western training.  Western training is ineffective, and you would need rest days.  I am not going to failure, I am not pushing out one more rep, I am not feeling the burn, I am not having rest days, I am not aiming for heterotrophy or any other form of aesthetics.  

This is prochnost' training.  I am training for strength and am getting a lot stronger.  Stronger muscles hold my body in a better position and reduce my pain.  Being in less pain means I push through doing these on the days when I don’t want to.  

I hope the ten things I learned from 1,200 days of exercise is helpful in motivating someone else to give it a try.  

If this is you, start small.  Pick an exercise, decide on daily minimums, then meet and exceed those minimums every day for 30 days.  Don't go to failure, and don't have rest days.  See how you feel at the end, perhaps you will want to do another 30 day challenge, and another, and one day you will look back at all you have achieved.  


Sunday, June 11, 2023

May pull up challenge

I am a big fan of 30-day exercise challenges.  They are not so long that you get bored, but they are long enough to notice a result from your hard work.  

My son wanted me to do a minimum of 30 pull ups a day, for 30 days.  I didn’t want to, but I love 30-day challenges and couldn’t say no.  I increased that to 31 days so it could line up smoothly with the calendar month of May.   

These are strict unweighted pull ups.  No swinging, none of that kipping nonsense, from dead hang until my collar bone is level or above the bar.  I have a weighted belt that I sometimes use for pull ups.  I decided not to add any extra weight for this challenge.  

As with any challenge, you have minimums that must be met each day.  No cheating, no rest days.  You can and should exceed your minimums, but that does not count towards the following day, you still have to meet your minimums the following day.  

I recorded the number of pull ups I did each day over the month of May.  As you can see, most days I exceeded my minimums.  Some days I exceeded my minimums by quite a lot.  

30 day Pull up challenge Skinny fat fitness
Pull ups per day over the month of May

It felt like the longest 30-day challenge ever (and not just because it was 31 days).  Some days the weather was bitterly cold, or windy, or rainy, or frosty, or I left home in the dark and returned home in the dark. 

Doing pull ups in the dark in the rain after a long day of work, or doing pull ups in the dark when the bars are frosty in the morning before going to work, was not heaps of fun.  I didn't enjoy it.  

Completing this challenge felt like drudgery.  I committed to doing them, so I did them, and I did extra.  It really is that simple.  

This is partly why I like 30 day challenges, they are only 30 days so I know I can push through to the end not matter how much I am disliking it at the time.  At the end of the challenge, I am stronger.

Monkey bars under shade cloth are great for pull ups

During this challenge I completed a total of 1,410 pull ups, with an average of just over 45 per day.  Not too shabby for someone of my age.  I did strict pull ups: chest to bar, doesn't count unless my clavicle was above the bar, all the way down to dead hang, no swinging and no nonsense.  

My daily minimum was 30 pull ups.  I did this the first day, and exceeded this minimum every other day.  This was intentional, I wanted to exceed my minimums every day.  The first day I wanted to check and see that I had not chosen minimums that were too high or too low, that's why I didn't exceed my minimums on the first day.  

You will probably notice that I progressively did more daily pull ups as the challenge progressed, but the increase was not linear.  This was deliberate, as well as being convenient.  As I had to go to work, most days I didn't have much spare time to complete many extra, so I only did a few extras.  I also tried to modulate my increase.  As I was not having any rest days, modulating gives my body a chance to rest and repair without having a day off.  It is only 30 days, so there is no time for a rest day.  

Pull ups on a sunny day without a jumper 

Something you can't see from the graph is the number I completed per set, and you can't see how many I can do in a set, but this is important.  I can do over 20 pull ups with good form, but it wears me down.  Doing 20+ feels like "working out", and I don't want to do that.  Never do a 'work out', if you want to get strong you should train.  At most I do 50% to 75% of my maximum in each set, never more than that.  

I want to train efficiently and effectively.  I want to get stronger.  During this challenge I mostly only completed 10 to 15 per set as they are easy for me to complete.  Doing multiple sets of small numbers means that your body doesn't need a rest day.  This meant my technique stayed good, it meant I never felt the burn, it meant I was never in danger of injury, and it meant that I gained strength efficiently.  This is almost the exact opposite of Western training, and it works.  

According to inspire usa foundation the average man will be unable to perform more than a single pull-up once they reach the age of over twenty-five years old.  If you can do more than one pull up, you are above average!?!  Apparently, less than 5% of men can do ten strict pull ups.  This gives some perspective to the results of my little pull up challenge.  

The fact that a skinny person of my age can do ten pull ups without feeling it, demonstrates that prochnost' training is working for me.  I put in a few non-consecutive minutes of training every day and can do more pull ups than over 95% of men.  Western style training is failing these 95% of people, it failed me when I used to do it, and it is failing you.  

If you have read this far through my post, set yourself a 30 day exercise challenge.  Make it something you can do at home, for free.  Something like push ups, or pull ups, or sit ups, or some other body weight exercise is perfect.  Make it something you can do in a few minutes at a time.  Make it something that you can do no matter what the weather and no matter what happens at work.  Do several sets throughout the day, never feel the burn, and never push to your maximum during your challenge.  Aim to only do about 50% to 75% of your maximum each set.  As you get stronger, do more sets across the day, and try to modulate this increase.  

Do you maximum once before your challenge, then do it again the day after your challenge ends.  You will probably be surprised at how much you have improved.  

Give it a go, you have nothing to lose.  Be stronger.  

Friday, May 12, 2023

Monkey bar strength training

Monkey bars are an excellent piece of strength training equipment.  They used to be a common sight in every primary school and most playgrounds in this country, and the general populace was reasonably strong and healthy.  

Sadly, monkey bars are becoming far less common in Australia.  Schools in this country seem to be phasing them out, and monkey bars are seen in fewer playgrounds and parks.  It appears that many outdoor 'fitness parks' which have exercise equipment seem to lack monkey bars.  

As we see less of these low-tech yet versatile strength building equipment, the percentage of the population who are overweight or obese is on the rise, and so are a host of ailments that plague people who lead a sedentary western lifestyle.  I am not suggesting that monkey bars alone would reduce the amount of overweight people in this country, but it would help.  

Years ago, we bought a set of monkey bars for the kids to play on.  They cost a small fortune, and were worth every cent.  

My kids adore our monkey bars.  Monkey bars are very versatile, younger kids can use them for some activities, and older kids can use them for other activities.  It is kind of impressive to see my kids playing on these, and how strong they are as a result.  

As well as my kids spending countless hours on them, I have also been using the monkey bars.  I use them every day for stretching, dead hang, pull ups, chin ups, front lever, leg raises, and other strength exercises.  I would almost go so far as to say that I use the monkey bars more than the kids do (but that isn’t true because my kids would sleep on the monkey bars if they were allowed).  

Monkey bar strength exercise

One of the strength building exercises that we do on the monkey bars probably has a name, but I don’t know what the name is.  It combines regular monkey bar swinging with pull ups, and it is kind of like doing pull ups that are far more functional and even have some cardio.  

1) Start with arms fully extended, holding onto two bars with your palms facing away from you (pronated grip).  
 

2) Do a pull up, go until your shoulder touches the bar.  Use control, do not swing, do not hit the bar with your head.  




3) Lower yourself until arms are fully extended and you are in a dead hang.  

4) Once in the lower position (and not as you are on the way down), monkey bar swing to the next bar.  Hold both bars with palms facing away from you (pronated grip).  



5) Do a pull up, go up until your shoulder touches the bar.  Always use control, never swing while doing a pull up, be careful not to hit the bar with your head.  




6) Lower yourself until your arms are almost fully extended.  Do not swing to the next bar until you are in this lower position with straight arms.  

7) Keep repeating this until you reach the end of the monkey bars.  

I am lucky that my monkey bars have eight gaps, meaning each side gets worked four times, and everything is even.  If you had an uneven number of gaps you would need to ensure that both sides were worked the same.  

This exercise has many benefits.  You get all the strength benefits that you would get with regular pull ups, you build the functional shoulder strength from swinging to the next bar, plus you get a small amount of cardio training.  

I can do fifteen strict pull ups without putting in much effort, I can do about thirty if I relly push myself.  Somehow doing these eight monkey bar pull ups is really hard and often leaves me out of breath.  

One of the many things I enjoy about this exercise is it is easy to modify.  Want to make this harder because it is too easy for you?  If so, do this with a weighted dip belt.  Want to work on endurance through doing more reps?  No worries, go forward on the monkey bars the full length, then go backwards all the way to the start.  Want to make it easier?  Not a problem, only do two or three each side.

Friday, April 28, 2023

Human flag for kids

Today's human flag is proudly brought to you by my son.   

skinny fat human flag
My son doing human flag

While his form is not perfect yet, he is training, and he is making great progress.  

While I am very impressed by what he can do, and while it is even more impressive that so few adults in this country will ever be able to do the human flag, I am mostly proud of him for putting in the work.

I am very proud of him for putting in the effort, I am proud of him for sticking at it for so long, I am proud of him for keeping this up even when it was hard and when he wasn't in the mood, and I am proud that even though he knew how difficult this would be he still decided to train towards it.  

While I helped him train, the biggest improvement he makes is when he gets a spare moment through the day and goes down to the monkey bars to put in a few minutes of training.  Training multiple times a day is the best way to improve.

Anyone can shift a heavy weight, anyone can 'work out', but not everyone has what it takes to train long enough and hard enough to be able to do this.  I am proud of him, and he is proud of himself.

We hope this inspires you to do some strength training.  

Monday, April 10, 2023

1,000 Pull Up Challenge - Before and After

My son and I have been doing some pull ups using our monkey bars.  I do sets of ten, he does sets of... actually I don't know how many he does per set.  

We don't go to failure, we aim to do about 50% to 70% of our maximum in each set.  We do a few sets each day and do them most days, and are not really dedicated to it as they are not part of my exercise minimums.  

On the days I work from home my son comes into my room from time to time during the day and asks me to go do pull ups with him.  A set of ten takes me about 15 to 20 seconds to complete, plus walking to/from the back yard, so probably less than a two minute break.  Time well spent.

One day my son came in 8 times, meaning I did 80 pull ups that day.  It was easy enough and I felt fine the following day as I was only doing small numbers.  I didn't 'feel the burn', the next day I felt normal, there was no muscle soreness.  

To build strength, the aim is to train as often as possible while being as fresh as possible.

This got me thinking.  If I had a day at home I could do ten sets of ten and complete 100 pull ups in that day.  If I had a few consecutive days, these numbers would add up fast.  

I had ten days off work over Xmas/New Year, and we were not planning on going anywhere, so I would have access to our monkey bars.  This was an excellent opportunity to do ten days of 100 pull ups every day, which would add up to an enormous one thousand pull ups over the ten day challenge.

Given that most people in this country would not do one thousand pull ups in their life (or even one hundred pull ups in their life) this sounded like an opportunity that was too good to miss!

To keep track of my pull ups I wrote down how many I did after each set on a post-it note.  I had planned on modulating the numbers somewhat, but ended up mostly doing sets of ten.  

Some days my son convinced me to do extra with him after I had reached my daily goal.  That's ok, I would rather do too many than too few.  At the start I did a few sets of 15,  that was too many and I would have been better off keeping the numbers lower.  

Each row were the numbers I completed in each set

I also decided to take some before and after photos of my back.  Some of these I was just standing relaxed, and others where I was flexing.  I was curious to see if there would be any difference after such a short amount of time.

Perhaps ten days is too short to notice any difference, or perhaps the difference would be easily noticeable.  You can find out below.

 

Before the ten day 1,000 pull up challenge: 

My back relaxed - notice the imbalances


My back flexed - before doing 1,000 pull ups over ten days

My back flexed - ignore the weird little scars


After the ten day 1,000 pull up challenge:

Relaxed - imbalances are noticeably reduced


My back flexed - after doing 1,000 pull ups over ten days


After the ten day challenge my lats feel firmer, my forearms feel firmer, my shoulders feel more stable, and I am far stronger, but you can't really see any of that.  

It appears that ten days is not long enough to see a great deal of change.  That's ok with me, I wasn't doing this for visual change, I wanted to get stronger and am glad I completed my challenge.  

Other than being slightly more tanned from having ten days not in an office, you can't see much difference at all.  This challenge was only ten days, so this is not unexpected.

There are some slight differences that can be seen in the photos.  

In the 'before' relaxed photo you may notice that I do not stand straight, I stand slightly twisted to one side.  The 'after' photo I stand slightly straighter.  I didn't know I was doing this until I looked at the photos side by side.  
  
In the 'before' photos my left shoulder is higher than the right due to an old injury.  This causes me a lot of headaches, neck aches, and other pain.  If you look closely at the 'after' photos you may notice that (when relaxed) my left shoulder is now lower, almost the same height as my right shoulder.  Being more balanced means that I am in less pain.  

Less pain is a great result, I'm happy with that!

Saturday, April 1, 2023

How many push ups can the average American do

I wrote a previous post on how many push ups the average Australian can do.  I also included average numbers for pull ups, chin ups, and more impressive body weight exercises.  If you have not already done so, please also have a read of that post (spoiler alert: the numbers are hideously low and you are likely doing more than that without training). 

Since then I found a page from a fitness magazine that details the strength of the average North American male.  I found this to be rather interesting for a number of reasons.  

According to that fitness magazine (I forget exactly where this image came from), the average North American male considers themself to be physically fit and can do: 

  • one pull up 
  • 31 sit ups in one minute 
  • 21 push ups in one minute 
  • has 17.6% body fat 

That is a pretty poor result for a nation that is so incredibly rich.  With all that money, and all their education, why are they all so weak and unhealthy?

Average North American Male

What makes these results even worse is that they are likely an over estimation!  The above estimates are based off people with gym memberships.  

While the above states that 69% of north americans consider themselves to be physically fit, the Mayo Clinic conclude that only about 2.7% of them really are fit.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0025619616000434

While you may disagree with the mayo definition of being physically fit, and you may not agree with drawing these results from a sample of only 4,745 people, you probably can't help but look around and see Average Joe in the street and notice that he is unhealthy.

The mayo clinic also estimated that the number of Americans who can even do one single push-up is likely only about 20 to 30 percent.  This statistic was based on people aged 19 - 39.  This means if you can do a single push up, you are above average.

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2019/06/push-ups-body-weight-bmi/592834/

Given the amount of North Americans who are overweight or obese (35% are obese, in addition to 40% who are overweight), and the massive health burden that this places on their society, perhaps the old Soviet tradition of obligatory morning exercises (zaryadka, зарядка) was a good thing.  Perhaps it was better than the indulgent and opulent attitude that prevails in current Western society?  

With zaryadka, the average Soviet did strength training every day, no excuses, without having a few rest days here and there, without over eating one day and working out harder the next day, without rewarding themselves for being good by sticking to their training regime, without motivational quotes from celebrities, and without overpriced gym memberships.  Back in those days you did the morning exercise routine, no lies, no excuses, end of story.  It didn’t matter if the weather was cold, or hot, or rainy, or if you were tired, or if you weren’t in the mood.  You just did your strength training, and you did it every day, so did everyone else, an everyone was better for it.  

Individuals benefited from being stronger and less prone to illness, families benefited from being more productive, and society as a whole benefitted from not carrying the massive disease burden that stems from a disturbing lack of fitness in the general population that we see in the western countries.  

I no longer do Western style training, I do prochnost' training.  This is based upon old Soviet style training.  I train every day, I have exercise minimums that I have to meet, and I meet them, no excuses.  It costs nothing, and it works.  

Even though I am scrawny, and I only have a few minutes to train each day, I can do far more pull ups, more sit ups, far more push ups, and have considerably less body fat, than the average North American.  I can also do considerably more of these exercises than the average Australian.  

If you are skinny fat like me, then stop working out like a Westerner.  It won't work for your body type.  Stop working out every few days in the name of fashion, stop trying to lose weight and/or gain muscle.  Start training, and train every day.  Start training to increase your strength.  Forget the gym, train at home.  

Two minutes of training every day will make a world of difference to your body.  You will become vastly stronger, you will probably lose fat and put on muscle, and you will be far healthier.  

Prochnost' training - be more!

Monday, March 13, 2023

How many push ups can the average Australian do?

I hate push ups, they are far too difficult.  I do them anyway, and (if you are not doing them every day) so should you.  

I wish they were easier because they are such a great strength building exercise.  They are free to do, they take next to no time, and they work almost your entire body.  I do push ups even though I dislike doing them.  I felt I wasn't doing enough of them, and I began to wonder how many would be considered average.

I have been looking on the internet to try and find the average number of push ups that the average person can do.  This is a strangely difficult question to answer because there are many definitions of what constitutes an 'average' person.  

I have found multiple graphs and tables, and none of them seem to agree with each other.  Most of these results are based on very fit people who obsessively go to the gym, whereas I am curious about what the average able bodied person aged 19-39 can do.  

The other week I was talking to a personal trainer.  Over the course of his career he has seen fit people as well as hundreds of people who are trying to get fit.  He hasn't worked with morbidly obese people, or people with various disabilities that make doing exercise rather difficult without modifications.  I figured his customer base is probably the type of people I was curious about, people with a general level of health and strength but are not elite athletes.

I asked how many push ups and other body weigh exercises that an average person can do.  I specifically asked what the average adult male can do, because that means more to me because I am an adult male.  

I didn't ask about the averages for females, I just didn't think of it at the time because I was curious about myself.  Sorry.  

The fitness trainer clarified the type of push ups I was asking about, he spoke a bit about how obese people tend not to be able to do any push ups or any other body weight exercises, how overfat people tend not to be able to do more than one or two of any exercise, how people can train up to being able to do quite a lot of push ups, and we discussed that I was merely after the average number that the average guy could do.  

As this is the observation of a personal trainer, he is basing these numbers on people who go to the gym as well as people who are paying for a personal trainer, so the numbers are probably a little higher than average.  These numbers are for people are either fit or are on there way to being fit.  


So how many chin ups and pull ups can the Average Australian do?

According to the personal trainer, based on his experience with clients over the years, the average man who is neither ultra-fit nor obese and has no major injury or disability can do about ten push ups.  He also said if you include overweight people in these stats, then the average would likely be about one push up.  

I was surprised by that, I would have thought the average Australian man could do a lot more push ups than ten.  

I started doing 2 minutes of training per day a few years ago, I was able to do about 25 push ups at the time which sounded like nothing but is apparently more than the average guy.  It didn't take me long before I worked up to being able to do about 75 push ups.  It was difficult building up to this number, it took a lot of effort but it didn't take too long because I was doing push ups every day.  


How many chin ups and pull ups can the Average Australian do?

While I was there I also asked about how many chin ups and pull ups the average man can do.  I was told that most people can do less of these than push ups, and obese people and overweight people often struggle to do a single one unassisted.  

That makes sense, I can do a lot more push ups than chin ups.  Most people can do more chin ups than pull ups as they are utilising their biceps more with pull ups.  I agree with that too, I certainly find pull ups to be more difficult than chin ups.

According to the personal trainer, the average man who regularly goes to the gym and/or is paying for a personal trainer, can usually do about 5 chin ups, or about 3 pull ups.  He also said if you include overweight people, then the average would be zero unassisted chin ups or pull ups.

I find chin ups and pull ups really difficult, so these low numbers seem reasonable to me.  That being said, even on a bad day I can do considerably more than both of those numbers, and so can my kids.  I can also do significantly more than those numbers wearing a weighted dip belt, so claiming hat I am lifting less weight is no longer an excuse they can make.


How many average Australians can do other body weight exercises?

I then asked about some of the more impressive body weight exercises such as human flag, planche, etc.  

According to the fitness trainer these are usually considered too difficult for the average person to bother training towards doing them.  They can't do these exercises, nor are they usually willing to work towards them.  Hmmm, that seems odd, but makes sense when I look around at all the overfat people in Australia.

It appears even though I am scrawny I am apparently a lot stronger than the average male.  I can do considerably more push ups, more chin ups, and more pull ups than people bigger than me.  On top of this I can do human flag, elbow lever, bent arm planche, and am working towards some more impressive body weight exercises such as back lever and front lever.  This all started with 2 minutes per day of exercise as part of my prochnost' training.  

You should do some push ups and other body weight exercise.  You should do this every day.  It is free and it will make you stronger.  If you are skinny you should train for strength, not size.  Start with a personal challenge where you complete 100 push ups a day for 30 consecutive days and go from there.  If one hundred is too many, set a smaller challenge.  If you can only do ten push ups, try to do five sets of them throughout the day to reach fifty each day, and build from there.  It is surprising how quickly you make progress when you can be bothered to do this every day.

It is impressive when a skinny person can do substantially more body weight exercises than a larger person.  Admittedly they are lifting less weight, but they are also using considerably less muscle.  When you use a weighted dip belt, then you are using less muscle to lift the same weight, which is even more impressive.  

Do prochnost' training.  Be more!  

Friday, March 3, 2023

Year and a Half of Lucky Iron Fish

Everyone needs iron in their diet to be healthy and strong.  Some people get enough from their diet, while others do not.  

I wrote a blog post of my experience after five months of using the lucky iron fish.  At that stage I had used it almost every night for about five months, and it was working great.   

The lucky iron fish is meant to last at least five years if used a few times every day.  Once the smile has worn off your ingot it is time to replace it.  

I have used mine for over a year and a half now.  During this time I have used the lucky iron fish almost every night, so I thought it a good idea to do another post saying how the lucky iron fish performed for me over this longer time frame.  

Each night I use the lucky iron fish to make up some iron enriched water.  We drink this water the following day, and it adds more iron to our diet.  

Each evening when I am clearing up after dinner I put the lucky iron fish in a pot, add 2 litres of boiling water, add a few drops of lemon juice, then let this simmer for twenty minutes.  

This is roughly how long I spend in the kitchen cleaning up, so it is not a big issue time wise.  I also have a lemon tree, which ensures I have access to free lemons.

Lucky iron fish after more than a year and a half of use
The same Lucky Iron Fish after only five months

Once twenty minutes is up I remove the lucky iron fish, quickly dry it with a tea towel, and put it on the shelf.  At this time it is usually still very hot, so any water I missed would evaporate fast.

I then take the water off the stove and leave it to cool.  Once cooled I pour it in a bottle.  You could add this iron enriched water to cooking, but we drink it the following day.  It tastes like water, but it has iron it in.

While it makes no difference, I always put my lucky iron fish with the leaf side up, that way I will know if wear and tear is due to it being scratched against the pot.

After using this each night for over a year and a half, my lucky iron fish has no rust, and is still looking good.  It had a little rim around the nose end that is no longer there, other than that it looks much the same.  The side that scrapes against the pot in the photo below doesn't even look very worn yet.

Lucky iron fish - still looking good

If your diet is low in iron you could buy iron supplements, or try to eat more meat, or you could use a lucky iron fish.  I used to buy iron pills, and they work for me, I now only use the lucky iron fish and I am much happier with it.

The Lucky Iron Fish is much like any other dietary supplement.  It does nothing if you already consume enough iron.  It works really well if you diet is lacking enough absorbable iron in your diet.  

The difference with the Lucky Iron Fish to taking iron pills is that the Lucky Iron Fish is far cheaper, it lasts a long time, it takes up less space, and is easier on the stomach than iron pills.  

With the Lucky Iron Fish there are no issues if you are vegetarian or vegan, and there are no religious worries for Orthodox or Muslims or Jewish people or any other faith.  I believe a percentage of sale price still goes to fund humanitarian work in Cambodia and a few other countries.


There are a few other brands that make similar iron fish, unfortunately I don't know if any of those are safe.  Lucky Iron fish has been tested, and retested, by many laboratories, on many occasions, and all confirm that this is safe and effective.  

Other brands have not had such rigorous testing, and I don't know where their iron comes from, so I would not risk using one.  

I remember not long ago a shipment of iron was seized at the border.  One of the nuclear facilities in China had been decommissioned, the metal had been sold, and it was hideously radioactive.  A lot of radioactive iron from that source had made it into our country before this shipment was stopped.  While I know that the iron used for Lucky Iron Fish is safe, I can't know about the iron used by other companies.

If you need more iron in your diet, consider trying a Lucky Iron Fish or Lucky Iron Leaf.

Be strong (byt' sil'nym).