The skill of strength…

The first person I ever saw use the phrase “strength is a skill,” was Pavel Tsatsouline.  His method of “greasing the groove” – repeating a movement pattern (like a pullup, for instance) very frequently throughout the day, but with very low duration/repetitions – summarizes this idea, and has helped a lot of people achieve levels of strength they thought were impossible.

It struck me today, after my workout, that this is really true, but in a different way than I had understood before.

It seems like the type of strength you practice is a skill.  I mean, like a skill, strength is highly specific.

I’ve long been an admirer of Digby and Sale’s SAID Principle – Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demand.  But I guess I never really felt it in my own training till today.

I started a weightlifting program about a month ago.  Specifically, DeFranco’s “Built Like a Badass” program (more on that later).  It had been a while since I’d done any regular, scheduled weightlifting.  My workouts for the past six months or so have been bodyweight stuff.

Today I was doing some heavy one-arm rows, and realized how different I felt versus the first week of the program.  It wasn’t just strength-gain/adaptation.  I felt accustomed to the whole thing – the movement pattern, the intensity, the stance, etc.  It was something I haven’t felt for a few years…since the last time I did one-arm rows on a regular basis.

I realized that that type of strength was a skill I had stopped practicing.

And I know that when I go back to bodyweight movements, there will be a (re-)learning curve there as well.

Seems like Pavel, Digby, Sales, and everyone else who said it was right…strength is a highly specific skill.

DeFranco’s Built Like a Badass Program

I’ve been a fan of Joe DeFranco’s for a long time now. For those who don’t know, Joe is a trainer in New Jersey, who runs DeFranco’s (his) Gym.

I bought his new “Built Like a Badass” program, and I think it’s really really good.

One of the things I like most about Joe’s approach is that he keeps strength training and skill pretty well separated. And, he says this in the FAQ section of the program:

“Go out and use your new-found strength/athleticism and experience new things such as hiking, playing catch with your kids, playing pick-up basketball or whatever you want to do.”

It’s an intense, intensive, 12-week, 3-day-per-week, weightlifting program, that uses the major traditional lifts (bench, dead, squat) as its anchors.

Can’t argue with that.

Further still, Joe has provided active links in the workout descriptions to videos of either him or his athletes performing the exercises.

Anyone out there will benefit from this program. I highly recommend it – and I’m not “affiliated” with Joe in any way, other than that he’s a strength coach who uses his brain.