Building Back Up

Not exactly before bed, but had about 100g carbs at 5pm, went to bed at 10. Probably too long huh?
Yeah, I would think so. The increase in serotonin levels will likely have dropped by then. Nothing wrong with a good serving of carbs before bed. Don't let that old wives tail about no carbs late in the evening mess with your head. It's BS.
Bench 4 x 8/8/7/6 x 205
Incline Cable Press 3 x 12 x 17.5's
EZ Upright Row 4 x 12 x 50
Cable OH Extensions 3 x 12 x 25
Neutral Grip Machine OHP 12x55, 10x70, 8x85

Upright rows getting better. Bench still garbage.


Is it possible to gain muscle without gaining any strength? Lol
Didn't you also recently slow down your negatives? If time under tension has increased you aren't going to see rep improvements you expect for a little bit because you are working more / longer each set already if that makes any sense.
 
Yeah, I would think so. The increase in serotonin levels will likely have dropped by then. Nothing wrong with a good serving of carbs before bed. Don't let that old wives tail about no carbs late in the evening mess with your head. It's BS.
Right on.
Didn't you also recently slow down your negatives? If time under tension has increased you aren't going to see rep improvements you expect for a little bit because you are working more / longer each set already if that makes any sense.
I did on several exercises, but bench was always very controlled, perfect form. Maybe I just need another layoff at the beach next week lol
 
Weight 223

Squat 5x225, 3x275, 3x285, 3x295, 3x305
Pullup 4 x 3 x BW
Double Arm Cable Row 8x85, 8x100
BB Shrug 12x135, 3 x 6 x 185
Reverse Peck Deck 4 x 10 x 35
Incline DB Curl 4 x 8/6/6/6 x 25's

@Dustin07 I'm coming after ya! Lol
Everything progressing here except Curls. So, bench and curls going down, everything else going up. Makes sense 😆

Squat 3x225, 3x275, 3x295, 3x315
Pullup 4, 3, 3
Double Arm Cable Row 12x100, 10x120
DB Shrug 3 x 8 x 70's
Reverse Pec Deck 4 x 10 x 40
Incline DB Curl 3 x 12 x 20s

Squat coming back. Last rep was a bit sloppy, but still got it at full depth.
 
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Nice work!
 
Thanks. It's frustrating though how I put so little work into lower body and those lifts keep going up, whereas I'm doing so much more volume with upper and not making a dent anymore.
Perhaps your volume is actually too high on upper body stuff. You may need less sets for those muscles due to different recovery times and whatnot. It is worth a shot since you feel what you are doing now is not working. That or pull back on legs a little to let upper body have more resources to recover. Of course that means you have to decide one is more important than the other, at least for a few mesos and then change up. Also your exercises could just be getting stale and need a switch up. Try low incline bench instead of flat, just like put a plate under the feet at the head of the bench, or the opposite and a slight decline. It is still close enough to a regular flat bench to carry over but just different enough to be a slightly novel change. Other options, like switch to DB over barbell for a while, or from free weights to machines. Lots of things you could adjust to make some tweaks that may result in the progress you desire.
 
Started vacation off with cheesesteaks wit Wiz at Pat's and Geno's! Had to get 1 of each just for myself...I prefer Pat's just because of the bread.
 
It's frustrating though how I put so little work into lower body and those lifts keep going up, whereas I'm doing so much more volume with upper and not making a dent anymore.
every time that happens I take a step back and see if I can change my approach some, instead of hammering the same thing over and over every week. Right now my lifting is fairly varied since I'm rotating between raw triples, emotm banded work, overloaded slingshot work etc so every time I come in for bench the numbers are much more exciting for me than in the past when I stuck to 5s or texas method, etc.
 
every time that happens I take a step back and see if I can change my approach some, instead of hammering the same thing over and over every week. Right now my lifting is fairly varied since I'm rotating between raw triples, emotm banded work, overloaded slingshot work etc so every time I come in for bench the numbers are much more exciting for me than in the past when I stuck to 5s or texas method, etc.
Thanks. Also good feedback. I'm also just stuck in a rut of not eating enough for gains in training days and eating too much on weekends or after bad sleep nights with a net result of adipose accrual 😆

Although, even though I'm not getting stronger upper body, I do think I've gained muscle up top, particularly in my arms.
 
I have zero doubt you're developing/building/rebuilding muscle. Even a shitty workout today is going to benefit you so much more 10 years from now then skipping entirely!

Only two meal hacks I can think of with your last comment there is:
if it's a rest day, especially say Saturday when diet might go to hell, consider IF. Skip breakfast, enjoy your coffee just black (or a 0 calorie sweetener if you need it?) etc and then enjoy the afternoon/dinner with the fam.

for the lifting days, keep easy access carbs. for me it's often those rice bowls I keep at work, but anything you can jam in your gym bag could help you get a few hundred calories/carbs preWO...

this week i'm back in routine so it's mon/tues eat eat, weds 36hr fast and rest, thurs/fri eat eat. Saturday I'll probably skip breakfast, have black coffee with my wife, and enjoy some BBQ in the afternoon etc. sorta helps to create balance for me.
 
Back from vacation...changing things up. Read an article by Christian Thibadeux (sp?) about keeping gains constant, and inspired me to change things more frequently. I'll be switching exercises, changing tempo, changing rest periods, etc, every few weeks. Some things I've changed already, but more to change later.

Flat DB Press 8x70's, 2 x 6 x 80's
Standing OHP 3 x 10 x 95
EZ Upright Row 3 x 8 x 60
Cable OH Extension 12x20, 10x25, 10x30
Incline Cable Press 10x22.5, 12x22.5

Kept everything 2-3 RIR just about. Easing back into it this week since I'm always wrecked after a week off. I really liked the DB press...it's been probably 6 years since I've done it consistently, and at that point was doing 120's for 6-8 IIRC. Hoping to be back to 100's in a few weeks.
 
Back from vacation...changing things up. Read an article by Christian Thibadeux (sp?) about keeping gains constant, and inspired me to change things more frequently. I'll be switching exercises, changing tempo, changing rest periods, etc, every few weeks. Some things I've changed already, but more to change later.

Flat DB Press 8x70's, 2 x 6 x 80's
Standing OHP 3 x 10 x 95
EZ Upright Row 3 x 8 x 60
Cable OH Extension 12x20, 10x25, 10x30
Incline Cable Press 10x22.5, 12x22.5

Kept everything 2-3 RIR just about. Easing back into it this week since I'm always wrecked after a week off. I really liked the DB press...it's been probably 6 years since I've done it consistently, and at that point was doing 120's for 6-8 IIRC. Hoping to be back to 100's in a few weeks.
So lets talk about goals regarding the bolded. Are you focusing on strength right now, or hypertrophy? If strength then go for it. If hypertrophy then you want to take as long as you can ring out growth to get back near those numbers. Why risk joint safety and other things if growth is the goal. A simple slow and methodical increase from whatever is work for you now is the goal for growth. Sure you can push for faster regaining of strength but then you have to work that much harder to get the same growth you would from taking it slower and getting all of the adaptation you can out of the climb back up to your old numbers.

Example Flat DB Press - 2x6x80, next session 2x7x80, next session, 2x8x80, next session 2x7x85, next session 2x8x85, next session 2x7x90, then 2x8x90, and so on. See you get like 7 effective sessions off of a 10lb increase, as opposed to 2x6x80, 2x6x85, 2x6x90 only giving you 2-4 sessions moving the weight up more aggressively causing more fatigue, making you need to rest earlier.

So, If hypertrophy is the current goal, don't make getting back up to 100-120 the goal, make growing as much as possible on the way back to 100-120 the goal which gives many more chances for adaptation and growth.
 
So lets talk about goals regarding the bolded. Are you focusing on strength right now, or hypertrophy? If strength then go for it. If hypertrophy then you want to take as long as you can ring out growth to get back near those numbers. Why risk joint safety and other things if growth is the goal. A simple slow and methodical increase from whatever is work for you now is the goal for growth. Sure you can push for faster regaining of strength but then you have to work that much harder to get the same growth you would from taking it slower and getting all of the adaptation you can out of the climb back up to your old numbers.

Example Flat DB Press - 2x6x80, next session 2x7x80, next session, 2x8x80, next session 2x7x85, next session 2x8x85, next session 2x7x90, then 2x8x90, and so on. See you get like 7 effective sessions off of a 10lb increase, as opposed to 2x6x80, 2x6x85, 2x6x90 only giving you 2-4 sessions moving the weight up more aggressively causing more fatigue, making you need to rest earlier.

So, If hypertrophy is the current goal, don't make getting back up to 100-120 the goal, make growing as much as possible on the way back to 100-120 the goal which gives many more chances for adaptation and growth.
Very good points. I guess my goals are a mix of strength and hypertrophy...it's so hard to look at where I've been and where I'm at now, which is where the strength goals come from. But, like I've said 20 times before, I need to cut fat. That needs to be my primary goal as my physique is bordering unhealthy body fat levels.
 
Very good points. I guess my goals are a mix of strength and hypertrophy...it's so hard to look at where I've been and where I'm at now, which is where the strength goals come from. But, like I've said 20 times before, I need to cut fat. That needs to be my primary goal as my physique is bordering unhealthy body fat levels.

remember Layne's PHAT routine?
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But, like I've said 20 times before, I need to cut fat.

I have seen a LOT of this lately. a TON of people posting that they have lost 50-75% of their target and asking if they should switch to bulking etc... an old high school friend of mine even just posted it recently so we got into a discussion. long story short I don't think someone should move on to goal #2 until they finished goal #1 unless they have the discipline and means of a guy like layne who can rotate 4 weeks cut 4 weeks reverse.

personal opinion of course but for average dudes I still think it's better to finish a cut arrive at the finish line, sustain for a while, before changing gears. I don't care what anyone says you can either get shredded AF or strong AF doing both? yeah right. so it's about picking that target and chasing it with laser focus, nose to the grindstone...

IMO

If your goal is get strong, then who cares. but if your goal is get lean then I really feel like... you need to write that **** on your bathroom mirror, meal prep like it, train like it, etc. cause getting big and getting cut are just two completely different approaches no matter how much we like to mix and match they're just not the same. different roads to different destinations.
 
Very good points. I guess my goals are a mix of strength and hypertrophy...it's so hard to look at where I've been and where I'm at now, which is where the strength goals come from. But, like I've said 20 times before, I need to cut fat. That needs to be my primary goal as my physique is bordering unhealthy body fat levels.
Well, if that is the focus, you may want to push overall volume up some, probably by lowering weight a little and increasing reps, and sets while shortening rest periods. That way you are increasing overall fitness while trying to lean up. Then focus more on strength once you are building back up from whatever level of leanness you decide you want to get to. Do what works best for each scenario instead of trying to do a little bit of all of your goals and not really getting anywhere fast. So, if I were you I would focus on dropping fat while increasing overall fitness levels until you are at a point you are ready to start the climb then choose hypertrophy, strength or something more like a powerbuilding program while back in a surplus.
 
When people get substantially leaner while also getting substantially stronger, they are either new, returning to intense training stimuli that they haven’t experienced in a long time, or there’s significant pharmacology involved.

There’s stronger, or leaner, or Tren.
 
When people get substantially leaner while also getting substantially stronger, they are either new, returning to intense training stimuli that they haven’t experienced in a long time, or there’s significant pharmacology involved.

There’s stronger, or leaner, or Tren.
Lol
Yeah, I hear ya, but I'm not going for a 6 pack while lifting 300/400/500 B/S/D, just less fatter then now lol
 
Yeah, I hear ya, but I'm not going for a 6 pack while lifting 300/400/500 B/S/D, just less fatter then now lol
Yeah it's a grind. I'm trying to very slowly, methodically, drop a couple lbs of vanity fat but my priorities are

1. 300/315 bench
2. 500 DL
3. get cut

so when I'm making choices in the gym or kitchen the nutrition matches that. I'm more apt to eat junk, than not eat. (except fasting). I'm going to get my reps in on deads and bench before I prioritize cardio and conditioning. With cutting being 3rd priority, it fits in when it fits (meal prep, extra time for cardio, or like this Saturday I'll be bucking hay) but it is not priority #1 so it fits in where it fits if it fits....
 
Squat 3x225, 3x275, 3x295, 3x315
Pullup 4, 3, 3
Double Arm Cable Row 12x100, 10x120
DB Shrug 3 x 8 x 70's
Reverse Pec Deck 4 x 10 x 40
Incline DB Curl 3 x 12 x 20s

Squat coming back. Last rep was a bit sloppy, but still got it at full depth.
Pullup 3, 2, 1, 1
Squat Top Set 3 x 275
Cable Shrug/Row 10x47.5, 10x52.5, 10x57.5
Reverse Pec Deck 8x40, 3x8x35
Neutral Grip Pullup 3
DB Curls 8x25's, 7x25's, 6x25's

Really liked the row/Shrug. Just read an article about it a few days ago, but now can't find it. Feels like the muscles that I'm missing though...Upper/middle traps and rhomboids. Went too light I think though.
 
Ya you can definitely make progress and in both areas with doing things properly. Its pretty simple, not necessarily easy though, but doable. I think people mix up various factors and issues and going for super shredded isn't the same as just losing weight.

Everyone is different and you have to keep in mind various factors like duration, current and former set points, and factors in and outside of the gym, but once you find your groove you can hammer it out.

I personally don't overthink my gaining and losing too much, the calories dictate that. Sure there is some nuance to help ease these things in the right way and to make things more "enjoyable" or "sustainable", but usually I don't make many drastic changes to my training, just my eating. I'll leave the caveat that a lot of my volume is self regulated, so it may go up or down a bit based on things from day to day and week to week fluctuations, but that is just a matter of finding what works for you in regards to those things.

Just keep moving along, note what is working for you and what isn't. At the end of the day finding what doesn't work for you shouldn't be viewed negatively it is just more information that can help you dial things in as you continue. Can't always guess right, but you can always be ready to make adjustments as needed. :)
Also great points. Thanks. I'm very bad about viewing what doesn't work negatively, instead of viewing it as learning opportunities.
 
everything works till it doesn't lol.
bashed my head against 5s for too many years until all the sudden some DE work, bands etc started setting new PRs
 
everything works till it doesn't lol.
bashed my head against 5s for too many years until all the sudden some DE work, bands etc started setting new PRs
I haven't done 5x5 in a while. It did work well back then. Maybe next block.

When y'all cut, do you maintain glycogen storage, or do you lose most of it?
 
When y'all cut, do you maintain glycogen storage, or do you lose most of it?
I tend to have an Arnoldy approach to cutting, pulling calories from carbs and fats. Which can lead to flatness and sore joints if I remove too much, as well as brain fog and fatigue. SOoooo I try to time my carbs preWO and utilize more LISS vs calorie restriction if possible (and of course the fasting this year has been great).
 
Pharmacology aside, if you consistently stay in a deficit while continuing to train hard you should expect to flatten out some.

Most people’s training is not going to deplete glycogen anyways

If they aren’t, I’d argue you probably don’t want to train like them anyway.
 
I tend to have an Arnoldy approach to cutting, pulling calories from carbs and fats. Which can lead to flatness and sore joints if I remove too much, as well as brain fog and fatigue. SOoooo I try to time my carbs preWO and utilize more LISS vs calorie restriction if possible (and of course the fasting this year has been great).
I would probably pull from fat first, then start with the carbs unless you are already eating in a surplus of protein. Then I would bump protein down to minimal acceptable level for me before cutting the carbs out. Which is quite the opposite from what I would have done in the past when I was a bit carb-phobic. Now it is more about the performance benefits, and hormonal benefits of carbs, as well as the protein sparing effects it has. So I want as many carbs as I can get in to drive anabolism and performance now.
 
I would probably pull from fat first, then start with the carbs unless you are already eating in a surplus of protein. Then I would bump protein down to minimal acceptable level for me before cutting the carbs out. Which is quite the opposite from what I would have done in the past when I was a bit carb-phobic. Now it is more about the performance benefits, and hormonal benefits of carbs, as well as the protein sparing effects it has. So I want as many carbs as I can get in to drive anabolism and performance now.
My fats stay pretty consistent year round aside from dates with my wife so it's not a lot to pull from, when I did that 8 month or so reverse/bulk from Sept till May a lot of the excess calories were double my breakfast carbs, adding carbs preWO and having some at dinner. protein was always over 200g/day at that point.
 
I still like to eat as many carbs as I can. Obviously not as much as when gaining, but I feel pretty good most of the time. Most people’s training is not going to deplete glycogen anyways, but with prolonged periods of dieting muscular fullness may wane a bit anyways.
My fats stay pretty consistent year round aside from dates with my wife so it's not a lot to pull from, when I did that 8 month or so reverse/bulk from Sept till May a lot of the excess calories were double my breakfast carbs, adding carbs preWO and having some at dinner. protein was always over 200g/day at that point.
How many grams per day of carbs when gaining like that? Vs how many now?
 
How many grams per day of carbs when gaining like that? Vs how many now?

I was sitting pretty low at 100-150g per day
Ramped up to 200-250g+ per day.

Went from 1/2 cup at breakfast, + fruit, + 1/2 to 1 cup at lunch (100g+ carbs) + whatever I had at dinner to:
1 cup+ breakfast, (45g) + bibigo rice up (71g) preWO + 1 cup+ lunch (45g) + same at dinner (45g) total =206g


Right now sitting roughly in the middle. just slightly smaller portions.
I can tell the difference is pretty clear between low carb and high carb in my size, performance, pumps, etc.

at 250g+ per day if I could stay perfectly in balance with everything else it would be dynamite but eating is sorta dynamic in a social atmosphere so I try to balance what I need preWO with what may be coming in the evening some days.
 
That can really vary. I tend to set protein, not change fat too much, and adjust carbohydrate up or down depending on if I need to gain or lose. I probably only go under 250g of carbohydrate if I really really have to towards the end of a cut and I've gone up to 550g before when activity levels were really high.

that exactly how i do it except my carb levels are typically lower than yours on both ends of the spectrum
 
That can really vary. I tend to set protein, not change fat too much, and adjust carbohydrate up or down depending on if I need to gain or lose. I probably only go under 250g of carbohydrate if I really really have to towards the end of a cut and I've gone up to 550g before when activity levels were really high.
Geez louise, that's a lot of carbs lol.
 
Weight: 224

Awful night sleep, but still didn't do too bad with my new exercise selection. 2-3 rir on all the bigger lifts, so have a little room to move up.

DB OHP 3 x 8 x 70's
Chest Dips 3 x 8 x BW
Incline CG Hammer Strength 12x90, 10x110
DB Lateral Raise (w/ pause) 3 x 8 x 10's
Skullcrushers 3 x 10/9/8 x 50
 
Weight: 223.6

Deadlift 3 x 3 x 315
Neutral Grip Pullup 3 x 2 x BW (long pause/negative)
Cable Shrug/Row 3 x 12 x ???
Reverse Pec Deck 3 x 10 x 35
Incline DB Curl 4 x 6 x 25's

Felt like trash for this. Guessing kcal are just too low again.
 
Weight: 225

Slept fantastic last night. Had a nice big dinner of home grilled picanha, rice, rolls and Ooey Gooey Butter Cake. This tasted every bit as good as a Brazilian steakhouse so this might become a weekly thing. Invalid Link Removed

Fasting until lunch.
 
Considering doing DL every other week, alternating with rack pulls from an inch below the knees, after reading that heavier rack pulls would be better for lats, rhomboids and traps, whereas traditional DL hits more lower body thus limiting load on upper. Or maybe I should alternate rack pulls with trap bar DL. I don't plan on doing a powerlifting competition, but for various reasons think rack pulls and trap bar DL would build more an aesthetic appearance compared to traditional DL. Any thoughts?
 
I think anytime you can hold heavier weight in your hands you're doing yourself a solid even if it's shorter rom... Personally.

However for lats, nothing fries me like bb
Rows. I like snatch grip to widen the lats and a normal grip to build overall back. I love power cleans for traps.

You might actually enjoy a true conjugate program in terms of variety. In some ways it sounds like you're sorta integrating some of the ideas already
 
I have no doubt full rom deads obviously hit lower body more than rack pulls but I've never hit rack pulls for more than 1-3 or 5 reps so the stimulus I'm looking for isn't aesthetic. If I'm bodybuilding I'm doing sets of 10-20 to failure, chasing the pump and feeding it intra workout to keep it
 
I have no doubt full rom deads obviously hit lower body more than rack pulls but I've never hit rack pulls for more than 1-3 or 5 reps so the stimulus I'm looking for isn't aesthetic. If I'm bodybuilding I'm doing sets of 10-20 to failure, chasing the pump and feeding it intra workout to keep it
Agreed, and there's a certain amount of functional/life strength/power I want from my training, but thinking I can get a little more out of rack pulls or trap bar DL. I've also had the realization my glute medius are huge, creating a more blocky appearance and distorted shoulder to waist ratio. Body fat plays a role of course, but not like this. I think I have been using the medius more then glute max which are also lagging comparatively.
 
Back from vacation...changing things up. Read an article by Christian Thibadeux (sp?) about keeping gains constant, and inspired me to change things more frequently. I'll be switching exercises, changing tempo, changing rest periods, etc, every few weeks. Some things I've changed already, but more to change later.

Flat DB Press 8x70's, 2 x 6 x 80's
Standing OHP 3 x 10 x 95
EZ Upright Row 3 x 8 x 60
Cable OH Extension 12x20, 10x25, 10x30
Incline Cable Press 10x22.5, 12x22.5

Kept everything 2-3 RIR just about. Easing back into it this week since I'm always wrecked after a week off. I really liked the DB press...it's been probably 6 years since I've done it consistently, and at that point was doing 120's for 6-8 IIRC. Hoping to be back to 100's in a few weeks.
Flat DB Press 8x70's, 6x80's, 3 x 6 x 90's
Incline Cable Press 3 x 10 x 22.5
Standing OHP 12x95, 2 x 10 x 105
EZ Upright Row 3 x 8/8/10 x 60
Cable OH Extension 3 x 12/10/10 x 25
 
As always it depends on why you do them, but I've never really been a fan of rack pulls for either hypertrophy or especially for strength (I'd probably prefer pulling off blocks if I really wanted to decrease the ROM).

Trap bar pulls also probably wouldn't be the direction I'd go if I was aiming for more back work either, I love them, but just not for that purpose.

I think deadlifts and pulling in general should probably be in everyone's training in some form or another, but also don't think it is necessarily the best for a hypertrophy stimulus for some of the back muscles. I do attribute a lot of my back development to pulling either as deadlifts, cleans, or snatches (and variants) several days per week for many years, but that also wasn't the main goal behind them for me (and its been a very long term progress kind of thing). Probably getting a little off track, but basically I'd keep deadlifting (because I like it) and add more volume for back exercises elsewhere OR maybe a variation (if you have straps) like Snatch Grip Rack Pulls (I know I just said I don't like them :LOL:) if I wanted a little more back bias to my deadlift.

Just some thoughts and food for thought, not necessarily saying you should go this way, just maybe getting you thinking of some options.

I truly don't know why I started doing them years ago but I slipped into a routine where it would be like
week 1, deficits
week 2, rack pulls
week 3, raw off the ground

and that led to PRs back then. I brought that system back and it seems to be yielding good results. the only other time I did a lot of rack pulls was when I had severe back injury that kept me from full rom, but the very heavy weight off the rack had no pain and seemed to provide the stimulus I needed for full recovery.

plus, it is fun to be able to hold 10%+ more than your normal 1RM lol.
 
I truly don't know why I started doing them years ago but I slipped into a routine where it would be like
week 1, deficits
week 2, rack pulls
week 3, raw off the ground

and that led to PRs back then. I brought that system back and it seems to be yielding good results. the only other time I did a lot of rack pulls was when I had severe back injury that kept me from full rom, but the very heavy weight off the rack had no pain and seemed to provide the stimulus I needed for full recovery.

plus, it is fun to be able to hold 10%+ more than your normal 1RM lol.
I've never utilized deficits, but to confirm then you'd do the below with the scheme above?

Lighter than normal
Heavier than normal
Normal working weights

Any % inc or dec specifically for the deficits/rack pulls (sounds like 10% for rack pulls)?
 
I've never utilized deficits, but to confirm then you'd do the below with the scheme above?

Lighter than normal
Heavier than normal
Normal working weights

Any % inc or dec specifically for the deficits/rack pulls (sounds like 10% for rack pulls)?

I think rather giving that specific of advice I'd likely recommend taking a look at any of the percentages Dave or Louie have posted on boilerplate style conjugate programs to build from there. For me, it was more like finding a 5rm in each of those modalities, then attempting to go up 5-10lbs each time I came back to that lift until linear progression was no longer a possibility in which case I usually test a 1rm then reset. But my specific training this year has been about:

deficits = best was 405 x 3-5reps
rack pull = best was 500lbs x 1
off the ground = best was 435 for a triple, 475 for a single

deficits probably have had the most carry over to building my deadlifts, but I do feel like getting really good at light weight doesn't by itself build my new 1rm. finding a way to overload and learn how to manage that heavy weight or what it feels like via rack pulls or slingshot (on bench) seems to have some carry over as well, and be an important way for me to grow familiar with the heavier weight.
 
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