Category: Longform
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2024 Lifting Recap - A better year
After a frustrating second year of consistent lifting, 2023 brought much better progress, though mostly along some different directions than I’d been focused on the first 2 years. My goals were more focused on health/consistency/functional strength and less on pure powerlifting strength and I read/ran a lot of stuff from Dan Johnand Pavel and it took my training in a different direction.
What I did
I ran 5 programs at various points this year
- 5/3/1 FSL
- Easy Strength
- General Gainz
- Mass Made Simple
- Deadlifts & Kettlebells - with a heavy KB Press focus added on
In the spring I saw good progress on shoulder health running an easy FSL program and doing a lot of direct shoulder rehab work. I then ran easy strength for a few weeks with an intent to focus on fat loss. The weight loss didn’t happen and this time was probably a net loss for my powerlift numbers, but I was able to make significant progress on chinups for the first time in my life, and that additional pulling work seemed to do wonders for my shoulder health.
Over the summer I ran a few weeks of GZCL 5x a week, which worked great for a few weeks and let me set a few PRs on the big lifts until I could no longer recover from it. I then transitioned to easy strength for the rest of the summer and finally saw some progress on fat loss, my first pain free bench pressing in 2 years, as well as continued pullup gains.
In the fall I did another month of easy FSL work and saw continued body comp improvements, before trying out Mass Made Simple, which I enjoyed but did not quite finish as craziness in life and work did not allow for the amount of sleep and recovery I needed to finish it out. I did manage a 20x Bodyweight Squat during this period and set a new Bench Press PR without any pain.
To end the year I started running a version of Deadlifts & Kettlebells with my life while also putting a heavy focus on the KB press, and am running that program into the new years. I didn’t do a ton of deadlifting the second half of this year and had lost some strength, and saw it quickly start coming back with more focus.
What I learned
In general 5/3/1, Easy Strength and DL&KB were run as “park bench”1 programs where I made some steady progress (especially on fat loss) and General Gainz and Mass Made Simple were run more short term as muscle building “sprints” for 4-6 weeks.
I found this breakdown (around 42 weeks of the year going at an “easy” pace and 10 weeks going more intensely on a specific objective) worked well for me and I will be copying that again this year. Consistency works, and doing things in a way that I can maintain allows for greater progress and fun over time.
I also saw that my shoulder pain issues seemed to be helped a lot by focusing on doing more pulling than pressing. The focus on pullups throughout the year seemed to make a major difference here once some direct PT exercises got me to a more stable foundation.
Progress Made
Start of the year numbers | 2024 Progress | ||
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Weight | 255 Jan 1 | 233 in November, 238 Dec 31 | |
Bench Press | 250 1RM | 260 1RM | |
Squat (high bar) | 355 1RM | 375 1RM | |
Overhead Press | 155 1RM | 165 1RM | |
Deadlift | 405 1RM | 435 2RM | |
Chinup | BW 2RM | BW 10RM | |
Pullup | N/A | BW 8RM | |
KB Press | N/A | 32KG 3RM |
I made moderate overall progress on the powerlift numbers this year, but my new maxes were mostly set at 10-15 pounds lighter body weight than the original numbers. Those are also all numbers I hit in training, as I did not do any serious 1RM testing this year. At the same time I put more focus on pulling exercises and kettlebells, and am happy with my progress there.
The two biggest wins though are getting down to a weight where I feel much more energetic, and getting my shoulders healthy to the point where I can do bench, pushup and overhead press exercises without pain or limitations.
Looking Ahead to 2025
For 2025 I want to continue “reasonable” training, and put most of my focus on the Deadlift, KB Press and pullups. I’m hoping to achieve a 2x bodyweight DL this year and would like to be able to do 10 strict pullups with a 25lb weight and be able to press the beast (48kg KB) for 1 rep by the end of the year.
I’m starting off the year by continuing the DL & KB program I began at the end of last year.
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Park Bench vs Bus Bench are Dan John terms for workouts that you can do consistently over time vs more short term programs run for a specific purpose ↩︎
Lifting Program Review: Easy Strength
I spent the last 2 months running Dan Jon and Pavel Tsatsouline’s Easy Strength Program. It’s a fundamentally very simple program that Dan still managed to write a huge ~200 page book about. The high level goal is to pick 5 exercises and to run them every workout for 40 workouts without doing more than 10 reps on any of the individual exercises. The idea is that it is a minimalist program thats run before your “other activity”, a sport or walking for fat loss.
Dan recommends running it 5x a week so that it takes 2 months total, and allows for some variation in exercise throughout the month. I ran it that way, while focusing on walking 8500 - 12000 steps a day (sometimes but not always doing a long walk immediately after the workout). My goals were fat loss, improving pullups, and improving my pressing.
I switched my exercises at the halfway point. For the first half I ran:
- Push Press (Inexperienced, goal was to help my press where I was having lockout trouble)
- Pullups / Chinups (Lots of variations, didn’t always stick to the 10 rep limit)
- High Bar Squat
- Ab Wheel
- Curls (Probably not a great rep scheme but I’ve neglected curls and wanted to support the chins/pullups)
Halfway through I returned to a normal work schedule after being on delayed parental leave the first month and made 2 switches
- Push Press -> Bench Press
- Squat -> Hang Cleans
Squats 5x a week proved to be too tiring while I was working, even at “easy” weights, so I switched to hang cleans (a “learning” movement for me that wasn’t overly challenging)
I’ve avoided heavy bench pressing for almost a year due to shoulder troubles that I had mostly overcome in the spring but still felt on pushups and bench. So I started very light here and worked my way up.
Results
P and DL numbers are from testing the last week.
Measure | Progress | Notes |
---|---|---|
Body Weight: | 248 -> 237lb | |
Squat | 355 1RM -> 375 1RM | early in cycle – saw some strength loss after not squatting the last 2 weeks |
BP | 250 1RM -> 255 1RM | more importantly, I hadn’t benched over 200 without pain in > a year, but benched 2x5@230 without pain this week |
P | 155 4RM -> 155 3RM | Small loss here but I think pretty good given weight loss and lack of practice |
DL | 435 1RM -> 395 1RM | Not overly concerned about this, I think this is mostly lack of practice this year, but probably some real strength loss from neglecting lower body the last month |
Chinup | 6RM -> 10RM | 10 chins was one of my goals for this year, very happy with that one |
Overall I was very pleased with this. I think I likely did lose some real lower body strength the last month from neglecting those lifts, but my upper body pressing strength seems to be somewhere between gain and maintenance despite losing 11 pounds, and I hit two of my big goals for the year (10 chins and benching heavy without pain). Even better I felt great throughout the program, other than when I tried to push the squatting a bit at the end of the first month.
I definitely will run easy strength again next time I want to lean out a bit and focus on 1 or 2 specific lifts. I will likely program a bit differently though. At least at my current place in life, I seem to have capacity to give my best to at most 2 lifts, and then can fill in solid work with 3 more. I probably don’t want to completely neglect lower body for 2 months, so in the future I’d probably go with a more “classic” split where I incorporate deadlifts along with a pressing movement and put them first, and then do 3 “easy/fun” filler exercises along them.
Lifting in the first half of 2024
I ran a mix of 5/3/1 and Easy Strength from January to June and while I continued to work through a shoulder injury in Q1 I did set some new PRs:
Squat: 350 -> 375 1RM DL: 400 -> 435 1(and 2)RM Chins: Max of 3 with poor ROM -> 8 clean
Shoulder health is significantly improved but still bothering me on bench press and pushups. Overall made minimal pressing progress so far this year even though improving my press was a primary goal.
I also focused more on “easy conditioning” with a decent amount of walking and easy runs, and that’s been a positive change. I’m down 12lbs from the beginning of the year.
Overall I’m happy with the progress even if the pressing is frustrating. If I make similar progress in shoulder health / conditioning and the lower body lifts the back half of the year I will be very pleased.
2023 Lifting Recap: Frustration & Learning
2022 was the year I began lifting at home, and it was a year of consistent progress and wins. 2023 was… different. I switched from a Starting Strength based Linear Progression to a 5/3/1 based program , and was also fully self-programming with no coach, and it was a year of ups and downs. In the end I learned that I had a lot to learn, and feel ready to get better in 2024. My quantifiable lifting improvements for the year are minimal compared to 2023 though.
What I did
At a high level I used 4 5/3/1 templates throughout the year.
Jan-April: “Classic 5/3/1 Boring But Big”
This was the first thing I saw with 5/3/1 and what most people seemed to do so I tried it. This is a lot of sets of 1-5 reps and even more with 10 reps with lower weights than I got used to from starting strength.
April-Early June: “Krypteia (aborted early)"
Krypteia is a heavily super-set focus variant of 5/3/1. It’s intended to be a conditioning focused program without sacrificing strength and size (too good to be true?). I quickly got injured doing this, though it was related to longer term problems not just Krypteia. I switched to Morning Star at that point
June - September: “Morning Star”
After I picked up a shoulder injury that was making benching dicey, I decided I wanted to shift to focus on strength and specifically Squat and Press. Morning Star was a way to do that which felt a bit more familiar to me. Overall these were the cycles I made the most progress in terms of strength numbers, and felt the healthiest.
September-December: Squat/Push/Pull Full Body / 1000% Awesome
I’d liked the full body feel from the summer with Morning Star, so I decided to move back to that, continuing to keep emphasis on the Press and Squat but reincorporate Bench Press and Deadlift.
What I learned
5/3/1 and Starting Strength have very different philosophies:
Starting Strength: Focus ~exclusively on 5 big compound lifts (Bench Press, Deadlift, Press, Squat, Power Clean)1 and try to make progress as quickly as possible on a 5 rep max
5/3/1: Focus on overall strength and conditioning with a goal of slower maintainable progress across a wider range of fitness indicators (multiple RM targets and general preparedness / conditioning)
I started 5/3/1 programs like they were Starting Strength (started with weights that were in retrospect too aggressive, didn’t do the accessory work, and ignored conditioning recommendations) and ultimately it led to a path of feeling like I’d stopped making progress and then getting injured.
The lessons for me:
Understand your program’s philosophy if you’re coaching yourself
5/3/1 was initially not effective for me because I wasn’t really doing the full program, I wasn’t really thinking of progress in the way the program encourages, and I wasn’t disciplined in how I progressed.
Slow progress without injuries > fast progress followed by injuries
That’s obvious in retrospect but I set up myself for injury specifically by pushing for heavier weights without focusing on discipline of having good quality reps, and by over focusing on push-style exercises (Press + Bench Press) without corresponding pull / shoulder health exercises to provide balance. The net result was I tore up both shoulders at points in the year, and have had to spend a few months on PT/rehab to get them back to feeling ~normal.
Progress Made
My 5RM numbers made embarrassingly little progress in 2023 relative to where I was in January.
Bench: 240 -> 240 Press: 145 -> 150 DL: 385 -> 400 Squat: 320 (low bar) -> 335 (high bar)
That said, I did hit PRs at a number of other rep ranges, I can do a lot more reps at high intensity during a workout without feeling aches and pains the next day and the quality of my reps is much higher both in high intensity low rep ranges like the above and at moderately lower weights with more reps. And while I only really started taking the conditioning portion seriously in December, I’m seeing some progress there as well as I’ve started running again.
Looking Ahead to 2024
I’m starting off 2024 with a major focus on conditioning, and also on keeping my workouts efficient as I’m going back to work after parental leave and continuing to spend time on PT recovering from my shoulder injury. In that vein, I’m mixing 3x a week of Krypteia Redux with 2 running days a week from now till the end of April. Still deciding what I want to do after that, but currently thinking that I’m going to return to “Boring But Big” and do it right this time.
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The program does include chinups in its 3rd phase as well, which I never worked in to my detriment ↩︎
Books Read in 2022
I read 38 total books in from the end of 2021 through 20221. Overall I’d say it was a mixed bag this year – looking back I wish I’d spent some more time with some of the books that had a bit more substance and could have skipped some of the lighter fare / so many work books. In 2023 I expect to go a bit deeper (take notes on important work / faith books, aim for more older books that have stood the test of time).
I’ve put stars next to the books that I enjoyed the most. Overall my favorites were probably
- The Life We’re Looking For — I love everything Andy Crouch writes, so this wasn’t a surprised. This book tapped into a lot of my feelings of wanting more from life / trying to wrestle with how my faith should change my every day life
- The Messy Middle - a great book about how to handle the craziness of startup-style work (relevant to me these days, this includes startup style work in larger companies)
- The Staff Engineer’s Path — a thoroughly practical book about what the career track for software engineers looks like after “Senior Engineer”
- Project Hail Mary - Great science fiction; I enjoyed this even more than the Martian
- Dominion — a history of western society through the lens of how it has been shaped / impacted by the Christian church. It’s long and a bit scattered (not many books cover the Library of Alexandria, the Crusades, the Beatles and Black Lives Matter protests), but I was fascinated.
Faith / Family
- ⭐The Life We’re Looking For by Andy Crouch
- ⭐ Habits of The Household by Justin Whitmel Earley
- Live No Lies by John Mark Comer
- The Family Firm by Emily Oster
- Confronting Christianity by Rebecca McLaughlin
- Deeply Formed Life by Rich Villodas
- ⭐ The Pursuit of Holiness By Jerry Bridges
- A Christian Field Guide to Technology for Engineers and Designers by Ethan J. Brue, Derek C. Schuurman, and Steven H. VanderLeest
“Work Books”: Leadership / Tech
- Building For Everyone by Annie Jean-Baptiste
- ⭐ How To Decide by Annie Duke
- Rituals For Virtual Meetings by Kursat Ozenc and Glenn Fajardo
- The Lean Startup by Eric Ries
- ⭐ The Messy Middle by Scott Belsky
- ⭐ The Speed of Trust by Stephen M.R. Covey
- Product Led Growth by Wes Bush
- ⭐ Make Time by Jake Knapp and John Zeratsky
- ⭐ Escaping the Build Trap By Melissa Perri
- ⭐ The Scout Mindset by Julia Galef
- ⭐ The Staff Engineer’s Path by Tanya Reilly
- ⭐ Kill It With Fire by Marianne Bellotti
- The Culture Map by Erin Meyer
*I did a deeper dive into these books on my professional blog
Big Ideas
- Drive by Daniel Pink
- ⭐Of Boys and Men by Richard V Reeves
Fiction
- The Sum of All Fears by Tom Clancy
- Debt of Honor by Tom Clancy
- Executive Orders by Tom Clancy
- ⭐Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
History / Biography / Memoir
- Delivering Happiness by Tony Hsieh
- ⭐ Dominion by Tom Holland (no not that Tom Holland)
- An Ugly Truth by Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang
- ⭐ Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed The Art of War by Robert Coram
Hobbies
- ⭐ How To Reassess Your Chess by Jeremy Silman
- Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg
- ⭐ How To Write Short by Roy Peter Clark
- 5/3/1 by Jim Wendler
- Beyond 5/3/1 By Jim Wendler
- ⭐ Starting Strength by Mark Rippetoe
Literature
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I had been keeping track of October-October reading, but I forgot to post anything in October and then lost my list of books, so this is ~correctish – I might have forgotten a few books and I may have finished some of these in late 2021 ↩︎