can we get vids where the plates are NOT blocking every part of your body that we need to see?
There is some good info in here and glad you are having fun with your PLing endeavors.
I am just going to throw this out here and if you want to ignore it that is fine.
I just wanted to say, (on your squats) it looks like you are struggling with the weight some, while also trying to figure your form and cues, depth and all the other stuff.
I am just wondering if it might help a bit to lessen the weight a bit (I know we all want to lift big numbers I am the same way) but until you really get a good natural feel and get the cues, form and depth cemented down, then slowly take the form "you've drilled" and add weight to it over time.
It might help or be easier with what the other guys are saying too. Instead of trying to concentrate on form while hitting heavy work.
Make it second nature, then you will know and feel, when your squat is off or your cues are out or you are losing tightness or form!?
Just my 2 cents
Bench is looking better, but you need to put the weight into your lats more than your shoulders by bringing the bar out a tad further. The squat video is inconclusive since depth, knee/ankle position, and unrack are unclear.
and bench felt better too!
so the bar should end up (during touch) more toward my stomach?
and bench felt better too!
so the bar should end up (during touch) more toward my stomach?
where the bar touches depends on your arms. how long your arms are, the width of your grip, and making sure the forearms are vertical at all times.
so if you have short arms and take a very wide grip the bar will touch rather high. if you have long arms and a narrow grip the bar will hit very low on your body. here is another way to look at it. with your arms at your side bend the elbows 90 degrees. with me that is about at my belly button. now keeping my forearms in the same relative position but swing my upper arm out wider the relative position of the bar moves up my body.
does that make sense?
Based on your three clips you posted first on 8/28.
The bench your elbows are flared try to focus on keeping them at your side. Walk up to something heavy, something that challenges you to push it and with one hand push it with the intention of moving it. I bet your elbow isn't flared it was at your side. Remember how it felt and take that to your bench. I also think you should try a new approach to your set up and leave out the head thing looks like it's messing you up. Also try not to position yourself so you're reaching out so far for the bar upon lift off. Screws your set up.
For the squat I would say keep your chest out more. It looks like at the top your chest caves in. That's not good for a straight back. And take the belt off and lower the weights. The belt is telling your mind you can lift more than you should. Your belt is keeping your back from getting stronger..
For the deadlift. Again lose the belt and lower the weight if needed. Try to focus more on keeping your back straighter. Start a little deeper than you are and focus on lifting with your legs first and straight back.
All in all you're not far off. Nice job and lose the belt lower the weights if you need to. Hope this helps. Good luck.
Just looked through some of the other squat clips. You gotta keep that back straight and core tight all the way through man.. looks like the bar may be too high the way your neck is cocked forward. Upon lift off take a deep breath into your chest, tighten that core, hips and back and keep them tight. Keep your head up, chest out, back straight at all times through the lift and try to focus in on sitting into the squat so you're not over your knees. I would recommend lowering the weights until you can get your form in check. Not super low just reasonably manageable. With the lighter weight do higher reps. Higher reps always helped me get my form straightened out. You begin to learn what feels right and your body will begin to naturally do it that way after such repetition. Also try front squatting. Start light if you don't do it but that might help show you where your back needs to be because the bar will probably fall off if you have bad form. Again, nice work.
P.s. I read a few of the other posts not all of them so sorry if I repeated what others said, just my 2 cents. Hope it helps.
You could try going just a tad higher with the bar position if you think it going to roll off. Maybe try grabbing with a false grip? Dunno man. Depth is better than before though. Good job.
Once thing I notice on the squat is your neck seems hunched forward and has you leaning forward. Try to pack the neck back some. It's something I started taking note off and it has been helpful.
C1 W4 dl:
Check out the guy doing sit ups right in front of me. Damn douche! Lost all focus because of that kid. Had 120kg on already then he decided that that was the best place for him to do sit ups. F****k!!,!!
Wow. What a moron.
I'm not literally saying look at ceiling, who does lifts like that lol.I would focus more on packing your neck and making a double chin instead of looking at the ceiling. For squats, that's as simple as "driving your head" back into the bar.
Looking at the ceiling is just over-extending your neck. You want to be neutral. I would prefer to counter a rounded back issue with proper bracing techniques instead.
I'm not literally saying look at ceiling, who does lifts like that lol. That's just a way to get lifters to get a straight plane on their back.
You can almost try and look at the ceiling.
Keep that chin up (look towards the ceilimg)
you've got some decent strength! I can only really comment on your deadlifts. Like kjetil said, I would keep the bar closer to the feet. Don't be afraid to dip a tad lower / drop your butt a bit during your lift off. Nice job on trying to keep a neutral head positionKeep up the good work
I was just going off of that lol Was only clarifying in my post that IMO, ceiling isn't a great idea. Maybe some lifters can get away with it but under a maximal load I would rather be looking straight.
Your right my post did sound like that haha.I was just going off of that lol
Was only clarifying in my post that IMO, ceiling isn't a great idea. Maybe some lifters can get away with it but under a maximal load I would rather be looking straight.
Guilty here! Used to squat with my head tilted 30 degrees up
Are your humerus' protracted and internally rotated? You're still struggling with holding the scap in the proper position and setting the weight in your lats.
Do you mean keeping my shoulder blades squeezed together on the bench? During Unrack?
First part is a postural question. When relaxed, are you in that position.
Second part is during the unrack. You're either posturally compromised or not pulling the bar out properly.
No, it's the position of your hands and humerus within the joint. The hooks might be too high, but you still lift it far too high and don't pull it out. It should have no effect on your squat as you should be standing straight up with the bar.First part: are you referring to elbow position? Second: the pins do get into the way, too deep compared to j-hooks. Also messes up squat Unrack
No, it's the position of your hands and humerus within the joint. The hooks might be too high, but you still lift it far too high and don't pull it out. It should have no effect on your squat as you should be standing straight up with the bar.
No, it's the position of your hands and humerus within the joint. The hooks might be too high, but you still lift it far too high and don't pull it out. It should have no effect on your squat as you should be standing straight up with the bar.
Maybe "breaking the bar" might help keep his shoulder orientation right?
I am trying to bend the bar and tuck elbows in as I lower