5 things I've learned in 5 months of BODYBUILDING

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  • Опубліковано 2 чер 2024
  • 00:00-01:47 Bodybuilding and strength training comparison
    01:48-06:07 I don’t have bad days
    06:08- 08:40 I don’t need breaks
    08:41-11:33 I don’t have assistance exercises
    11:34-13:53 Bodybuilding let’s me get more done
    13:54-16:24 Bodybuilding is not easy
    Follow me on IG @untamedstrength
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 556

  • @stevena8719
    @stevena8719 8 місяців тому +1387

    Watching youtube fitness on the toilet gang button

    • @The3Lego3Freak
      @The3Lego3Freak 8 місяців тому +53

      Watching youtube fitness while eating gang button

    • @copeenthuisiast5453
      @copeenthuisiast5453 8 місяців тому +61

      Watching youtube fitness while eating on the toilet gang button

    • @chaosvii4605
      @chaosvii4605 8 місяців тому +56

      Watching youtube fitness on the toilet and my legs have gone completely numb gang

    • @SweatiestToes
      @SweatiestToes 8 місяців тому

      POOP UNTAAAAAAAAAAMEDDDDDSDUGHHHHHH

    • @jcdenton2907
      @jcdenton2907 8 місяців тому +23

      Shit is running down my leg

  • @bluetrain69
    @bluetrain69 8 місяців тому +214

    I’m 54, I was a bodybuilding gym bro for 30 years. One day after watching Alan on UA-cam, I decided to powerlift. I love it! It’s like I’m lifting for the first time again. Falling in love again. Changing routines is very healthy mentally & physically. Who knows, maybe I’ll try strong man at 60:) Keep going to the gym, stay fit and strong, mentally & physically and “train untaimed” that’s all that matters.

    • @nizzie16
      @nizzie16 8 місяців тому +2

      An inspiration for all of us! Keep going, brother!

    • @adammeade2300
      @adammeade2300 8 місяців тому +1

      Similar. I’ve been a martial artist since I was 6. I began adding weight training to the mix on and off for most of my 20’s and 30’s. Definitely gained some benefits, but I favored machines and only rarely used dumbells. When I did, it was for rows, concentration curls, or bench. Never really had any consistency or structure. Now, at 42, I’ve been working with the Starting Strength protocol as the foundation of my routine. Been doing it for about 3 months now and loving it! I’ve tailored some things to my own goals and needs, but bb squats, ohp, bench, and deadlifts are the core of my workout now. I lift 3 days a week, taking 2 days for rest after the barbell sessions. I also add pullups or chinups to every session, as well as hanging leg raises. Then, after my big 2 for the week, I’ll add one accessory day to focus on things that the big compound movements don’t hit as well like upper back, calves, and hammies. If only I had trained this way when I had peak explosiveness in my 20’s.

    • @Samuel_Gronkowski
      @Samuel_Gronkowski 8 місяців тому +1

      Top tier comment!

    • @limitisillusion7
      @limitisillusion7 8 місяців тому +3

      I don't think changing routines is healthy by itself. I just think it helps keep things fresh which helps with consistency. I write my own programs, usually 3 phases lasting 3-4 weeks per phase, where I just remove rest days as I advance through the phases to get more volume. More cardio in the first two phases due to the lower volume. Then I change over to a different split and/or swap power lifting and hypertrophy rep ranges. Diet, exercise, and purpose are the cornerstones of mental and physical health. Apply discipline to all 3 and you'll probably be a happy person. Much of that discipline relies on finding a strategy that works for you. I left out the purpose aspect for a decade and was never very happy, despite good nutrition and consistent exercise, but the consistency helped me find a purpose. I wouldn't be here without running and lifting. The exercise is such an instinctual activity that's been very much removed from modern day life. You have to get it done. I started this journey for aesthetics, and that means nothing to me now. I just do it to keep me healthy and happy.

    • @adammeade2300
      @adammeade2300 8 місяців тому +2

      @@limitisillusion7 Aye. Can respect that grind. Would like to challenge you on some philosophical points as they pertain to meaning and purpose, but if you’re grinding gears in the gym then you’re in a better place than most in our modern society.

  • @quyiter
    @quyiter 8 місяців тому +377

    One thing I really like about bodybuilding training over powerlifting training is that if I'm just not feeling it on a day I come in (no sleep because babies were up or stress from work etc.), I don't feel like I've failed if I'm not up for hitting my top sets. I can still push my lifts to failure or near it and even if my reps are less than what I got on a previous session I can be sure it was still a beneficial session. Whereas with powerlifting that would signal: 'Time to deload and drop the weights back down try again in 4 weeks' with bodybuilding it's more like 'I'm going to sleep well tonight and I'll try again in a couple days'.

    • @andee6770
      @andee6770 8 місяців тому +34

      Couldn’t agree anymore, plus its less stress on ur nervous system so u can bounce back much faster

    • @noahcostanza7611
      @noahcostanza7611 8 місяців тому +9

      I so agree with this. Bodybuilding has given me +1s and been productive almost every session unless I'm sick. but a deload every 5 or 6 weeks takes off some stress and I don't really need to worry about doing less for a week it's just a week and back into the fire u know

    • @quyiter
      @quyiter 8 місяців тому

      @@noahcostanza7611 I really love going for the +1's, keeping track of that has really given me a renewed vigor for training I felt has been missing for a while.

    • @F-Tier_Physique
      @F-Tier_Physique 8 місяців тому +6

      Yeah for bodybuilding its like whatever Ill just hit failure with whatever weight feels decent, within reason ofc. Shoulders hurts on chest/pressing day? Ill just change exercises to still get a pump and a good stimulus.
      However in bodybuilding its also easier to get a little lazy. Ah Incline bench didnt feel amazing today, Ill just do some light flat presses for 3 mid sets instead of 1-2 sets to failure. Ah lat pulldowns feel better right now -> skips doing actual pullups cuz its hard for 3 years.

    • @andee6770
      @andee6770 8 місяців тому

      @@F-Tier_Physique Yeah its good to find that balance of achiving results week over week but still using a higher rep range and focusing on hypertrophy. can be hard balancing consistent intesity and being realistic with your body/injuries

  • @LarryMarkel
    @LarryMarkel 8 місяців тому +29

    Alan is the wise philosopher of the fitness community. Dropping wisdom and self analysis for us all to learn from.

  • @RossGoneRogue
    @RossGoneRogue 8 місяців тому +92

    Interesting following you since 2016 with the perma bulk "only men are over 200lbs" things through the running and getting cut phase and now looking jacked as hell. This is a really solid physique man.

    • @brandonwalker5011
      @brandonwalker5011 7 місяців тому +2

      I feel like "only people over 200 are men" makes more sense in the context of your sentence.

  • @techdeth
    @techdeth 8 місяців тому +126

    Awesome to see your journey, been with you for YEARS now. Amazing how our physiques change as our goals and lives change. Thanks as always for being another point of contact to get me excited to go to the gym every day! 🤘😈

    • @zsahe21
      @zsahe21 8 місяців тому

      !!!!

  • @angrygoldfish
    @angrygoldfish 8 місяців тому +30

    This man gets it.
    I never have bad days; I only have days that aren't great. I never lose more than one rep in an exercise in a week. 90% of the time I either add a rep or maintain reps but with improvements in RIR, control, tempo, etc. That's why I love bodybuilding. No working up to a top set to see whether my bench is bad or good that day. 90% of the time I can repeat or improve upon what I did previously. Muscle building is slow and my program factors that in. I still deload, but that is usually because life gets in the way or because I get sick. In general, no bodybuilding program should require a deload every fifth week. Some will benefit from them, but they're not required unlike in strength-specific sports.

    • @zerrodefex
      @zerrodefex 8 місяців тому

      Yeah I no longer get upset because I had to take some weight off the bar or leave reps on the table because I came in a bit tired and wasn't able to do what I was going in the previous session.

  • @guillermogilthemessenger
    @guillermogilthemessenger 8 місяців тому +27

    I believe your channel has aged magnificently. Congratulations for continuing to provide insightful and stimulant videos!

  • @irish9372
    @irish9372 8 місяців тому +97

    It’s so refreshing to have someone articulate the same realizations I’ve had over my fitness journey. Thank you for making this, it really helps 💪

    • @early20s18
      @early20s18 8 місяців тому

      soy

    • @irish9372
      @irish9372 8 місяців тому

      huh?@@early20s18

    • @urgamecshk
      @urgamecshk 8 місяців тому

      ​@@early20s18goy

    • @VrSword
      @VrSword 7 місяців тому

      @@early20s18 Do you even lift?

    • @early20s18
      @early20s18 7 місяців тому

      @@VrSword yeah

  • @olli408
    @olli408 8 місяців тому +38

    It required a lot of me as a human to be able to get out of my old mentality and try to not think of myself as a Powerlifter only. I think I have come far enough to be able to appreciate bodybuilding as more than just being shallow and wanting to look hot. But just as I was starting to actually listen to your words I see that St Anger T-shirt and realize that my mental capacity to change and my ability to reconsider my beliefs has it limits. I can still hear the faint ring of that snare.

    • @o-neil
      @o-neil 8 місяців тому

      Lol

    • @TheGreektrojan
      @TheGreektrojan 8 місяців тому +1

      TBF its an easy way to elevate your heart rate without the actual warmup. Its like the old dudes going 0.01mph on the bikes, letting the cable news they're watching do the work for them.

  • @bondedcarbon
    @bondedcarbon 8 місяців тому +6

    Definitely agree with no bad days in bodybuilding. It's not just attachment to a lift and the weight and ego, it's also the repetitive stress and possibility unsuitability of the powerlifting movements for so many people that causes the bad days. Bodybuilding gave me the freedom to search for and adapt movements that fit my relatively fucked up body, meaning I can really go for it in my workouts without worrying about my weird pelvic bone imbalance or the fused vertebrae I have etc. I train legs almost entirely with single-leg variants, even on machines and avoid about 90% of the joint pain I used to experience. Am I ever gonna have Tom Platz quads or a 600lb squat? Probably not. But I imagine I'll be walking in and out of the gym for about 30 years longer than I would have otherwise.

  • @mattb4251
    @mattb4251 8 місяців тому +80

    Hopped on the hypertrophy train about 4 months ago and 100% agree with this. Using the RP hypertrophy app has made me reevaluate what I considered RPE levels and forced me to progress without having to think too much. Obviously this can be done without an app, but the relationship with what I'm trying to accomplish has felt like a new paradigm. Also, the elimination of the idea of accessories has been awesome. Starting leg day with 4 or 5 sets of extensions feels great!

    • @user-ii7xc1ry3x
      @user-ii7xc1ry3x 8 місяців тому +28

      Lowkey would love to see Alan in a scientific workout with the RP crew.

    • @zsahe21
      @zsahe21 8 місяців тому +1

      Please someone make it happen.@@user-ii7xc1ry3x

    • @donjuanmckenzie4897
      @donjuanmckenzie4897 8 місяців тому +1

      TRAIN
      CONJUGATE

    • @buckyhurdle4776
      @buckyhurdle4776 8 місяців тому +9

      Dr mike is the shit

    • @zsahe21
      @zsahe21 8 місяців тому

      Conjugate's ass

  • @piyushdwivedi7195
    @piyushdwivedi7195 8 місяців тому +27

    I started hitting the gym 4 months ago and I'm thankful I already knew about NH, GVS, Basement Bodybuilding, Steve Shaw, Alexander Leonidas & BOM.

    • @TCt83067695
      @TCt83067695 8 місяців тому +2

      Good luck on your journey btw

    • @dezzywikins
      @dezzywikins 8 місяців тому

      Yeah, you have all the tools you need. Basement coaches me and I have made fucking insane gains. Those other channels rock too

    • @dezzywikins
      @dezzywikins 8 місяців тому

      @@azurnxo2134 Basement Bodybuilding? You can search his channel here on UA-cam. He is a beast

    • @juuso4148
      @juuso4148 8 місяців тому

      ​@@azurnxo2134dukenuke, toiletbros, jungletiger10, massivecannons and totherooftren

  • @CKaiser5517
    @CKaiser5517 8 місяців тому +1

    This makes so much sense. I have also been doing a bodybuilding style training for a few weeks now. I do like the variety and the pump. Thanks for the great insight, Alan.

  • @vaselinemachine1484
    @vaselinemachine1484 8 місяців тому +13

    Been watching Alan for years and he still manages to make videos with messages I didn’t know I needed to hear! Thanks for the years of free useful advice

  • @LBJedi
    @LBJedi 8 місяців тому +12

    Watching you go through this process is so cool! I’m no where near as strong/advanced as you, but it’s awesome to see you make similar discoveries to the ones I’m making. It’s incredibly motivating and reassuring.

  • @user-dn4lg1dv5v
    @user-dn4lg1dv5v 8 місяців тому +16

    Awesome video brother. I too enjoy bodybuilding, while including the major barbell lifts. But I'm so over doing my 5's!😂😂 glad to hear training has become fun again for you. God bless!

  • @martinbugge6220
    @martinbugge6220 8 місяців тому +1

    The best workout type, is the one you find entertaining.
    Thanks for great content, you a beast man.

  • @tackthekack1
    @tackthekack1 8 місяців тому +1

    I needed to hear this. Thx Alan.

  • @luxchild
    @luxchild 8 місяців тому

    Aweosme video Alan and super helpful and thoughtful! Please keep making these videos on your perspectives coming into bodybuilding from strength training!

  • @CBMof0
    @CBMof0 8 місяців тому +1

    Just wanted to say thank you for your video about lower back injuries (from 2017). It really changed the way I've dealt with injuries and niggles, and helped fix a nasty back injury sustained on deadlifts.

  • @MrUncucked
    @MrUncucked 8 місяців тому +2

    I started watching your channel years ago to learn proper squat/deadlift form years ago. Recently ive started watching natural hypertrophy and its cool to see you dive into body building as well

  • @Stang_Gang_8
    @Stang_Gang_8 8 місяців тому +2

    I’ve found a lot of the same things have happened to me in my training. I’m still focused on chasing my powerlifting goals, but in the last year or so I’ve found a ton of value in implementing a bodybuilding approach to my accessory work. Also just being free to hit whatever exercise I want or weights/reps that feels good for the muscle group I want to hit is so much more sustainable in the long run.

  • @umutbuyukgoren6641
    @umutbuyukgoren6641 8 місяців тому +1

    Great video as always

  • @NisimDoesPowerliftingFitness
    @NisimDoesPowerliftingFitness 8 місяців тому

    Alan, I always enjoy your content. I honestly looking forward to view each of your new videos.

  • @silvo305
    @silvo305 8 місяців тому +2

    Fully agree with everything said! I love training for sport, strongman, powerlifting etc, but bodybuilding style training just me makes me feel good. I also don’t dread it on days when I’m tired or really busy.

  • @danburroughs2730
    @danburroughs2730 8 місяців тому +8

    As someone who has recently shifted from bodybuilding training to strength training (as part of a planned progression), I feel the bad days in my soul. Appreciate your anecdotal experience 🤙🏼

  • @livestrongforever
    @livestrongforever 8 місяців тому

    very good assessment Alan!

  • @MichaelBravine1
    @MichaelBravine1 3 місяці тому

    I love this comparison video. Very helpful.

  • @michaelkelly2783
    @michaelkelly2783 8 місяців тому +3

    Love this perspective. I've beaten myself up over "bad" days many many times.

  • @drewzerTV
    @drewzerTV 8 місяців тому +1

    I'm going through a similar journey. I've been enjoying more body-building training lately, too. Thanks for the video.

  • @scooobyj8714
    @scooobyj8714 8 місяців тому

    Great video. It is always refreshing to change up your program.

  • @jerrynash8920
    @jerrynash8920 8 місяців тому

    Alan. Thank you for the video. You gave this older man a lot of food for thought concerning the different worlds of strength sport; including bodybuilding.

  • @veritas2145
    @veritas2145 8 місяців тому +1

    Good stuff Alan👍👍

  • @the.natural.guy.
    @the.natural.guy. 8 місяців тому

    What an absolute pleasure to listen to. Great video, Alan!

  • @Darknight526
    @Darknight526 8 місяців тому +1

    Great video Alan!

  • @ibizavastic1621
    @ibizavastic1621 8 місяців тому +4

    very wholesome video, i have also switched from a powerlifting training to a "bodybuilding"-routine. i went from chasing numbers to having a higher frequency session every day.

  • @cindykyle3551
    @cindykyle3551 8 місяців тому

    Thank you. Ive been listening and watching your tips and tricks for years. You have inspired me during my heavy days. And have given me the ok to have grace with myself and to keep going. I have powerlifted for the past 8 years or so. I love going heavy, but my body has been back firing on me lately. I am a homeschool Mom of three and i need my energy to go towards my family. But i can have a good day lifting in the gym too. Thank you for your encouragement always.

  • @Phreestyle1
    @Phreestyle1 8 місяців тому

    Great video.
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @TCt83067695
    @TCt83067695 8 місяців тому

    Been away from this channel for a while so i felt warm and fuzzy hearing the outro again. My favorite.
    Ftr I was never a powerlifter but I can confidently say youre just in the honeymoon phase Alan. Lets have another video after a full year 😊

  • @KAOS_REAL
    @KAOS_REAL 8 місяців тому

    Very insightful thanks Alan

  • @kozmo7
    @kozmo7 8 місяців тому +2

    Looking jacked my friend.
    I started powerlifting around when you did but switched over to bodybuilding overtime and kinda stuck with it by accident. I still lift heavy but it allows me to do more things and I also love looking more sculpted while still having plenty of strength.
    Also, I just program strength mesos if I want to push strength and take a break from building.
    It’s a win win.
    PS, as you become more advanced, your required set volumes go up along with the weights and it very much has a similar effect of “breaking past the wall” in order to get training started that you described with strength training. As someone who has done both, they both equally are tough as shit except I tend to vomit more with bodybuilding when sets get super high and the muscle feels like it’s being completely destroyed.
    Different kind of pain but still pain!
    Good stuff

  • @j.a.6866
    @j.a.6866 8 місяців тому +1

    Nice! Looking good brotha

  • @blackpus5263
    @blackpus5263 8 місяців тому +1

    Bro! Way to go man! Your physique has really improved, I can see it on the thumbnail. Your arms and shoulders have gotten much bigger!

  • @cactuarking4138
    @cactuarking4138 8 місяців тому

    Nice shirt fellow metalhead. Your shifts in perspective over the years have been inspiring. Thanks for documenting your journey

  • @ianwoodaudio
    @ianwoodaudio 8 місяців тому

    Thanks for posting this. For Recovery reasons I switched to a bodypart split, and will admit I've been treating arm day as my "easy day". I'll go into it with more focus on each rep.
    Thanks for all your help and anecdotes and instruction over the years.

  • @Lucas-nx9zc
    @Lucas-nx9zc 8 місяців тому

    Great video! I’m currently in a mix of higher rep range and doing my 4x4 and less for my strength gains in my compound lifts!
    You inspired me to embark on a body building journey next year and really chase those bodybuilding style
    Workouts!

  • @BasementBodybuilding
    @BasementBodybuilding 8 місяців тому +26

    Excellent vid, love the new mindset man.

  • @anssimyllymaki1624
    @anssimyllymaki1624 8 місяців тому +3

    I was in bodybuilding online coatching for two years. I loved it. Bodybuilding is shuch a fun trainig. Powerlifting is other kind of fun. But it tears your body down. I was in pain training powerlifting.

  • @TheUltraGamer98
    @TheUltraGamer98 8 місяців тому

    you've made great progress Alan!

  • @dividendking3686
    @dividendking3686 8 місяців тому +1

    The progression stress went away when I started doing bodybuilding. I still progress just fine. I'm stronger now mid bulk than I was at peak bulk last time but I don't stress progression anymore. 💪🏻 Good to see you doing great! Also, haven't needed a deload since switching to bodybuilding 👌🏻

  • @shawnpatten6515
    @shawnpatten6515 8 місяців тому

    Great video Allen.

  • @MichaelBravine1
    @MichaelBravine1 3 місяці тому

    Super inspiring and realistic stuff man-

  • @poopslappa1661
    @poopslappa1661 8 місяців тому

    Glad this is coming at me a year into training SBD instead of 10! Thanks Alan, great video

  • @vandal144
    @vandal144 8 місяців тому

    I'm loving the bodybuilding content, particularly since I've also switched in the past year and a half. I'd really like to see you on some RP style training, moving from 3-4 RIR to 0 RIR over a 6 week meso, with a deload at the end. Super slow eccentrics and pauses have given me the best gains in my life. I feel like you'd like squat shoes on the hack as well!

  • @aclimbatize
    @aclimbatize 8 місяців тому +1

    Some really great points and realizations here. I'm a pretty competitive person, so back when I was doing powerlifting and later crossfit, every workout felt like a competition with myself and everyone else and it was exhausting mentally. My transition to bodybuilding has been really refreshing because as long as I get a pump and get sore the next day in the muscles I worked, I know I put in good work and it doesn't matter if I didn't got that extra rep, or put more weight on the bar/stack. It's surprisingly freeing, and I'm almost always psyched to get back to the gym as soon as my soreness from the last workout has waned. That and my ADHD brain loves it!! If I get bored with an exercise, rep range, volume, I can change it up and not feel like I'm setting myself back somehow. But at the same time, moreso than crossfit, it feels like I can still keep track of my progress even if I'm changing up my exercises every few weeks/months.
    Also, as I get older, injuries become more and more of a concern. Because I'm no longer lifting weights that are best for 5 reps or less, the weight on the bar is less and the control is far more important. Basically bodybuilding for me is the art of making lighter weight feel heavy. In doing so I reduce my acute and overuse injury risk as well as systemic and joint fatigue. If you feel burnt out with powerlifting, seriously consider bodybuilding, you might be surprised just how much you enjoy it!

  • @davidburnham5098
    @davidburnham5098 8 місяців тому

    Yeah dude I get it going through the same thing , it’s all the same as long as your pushing yourself and enjoying looking good and strong Alan.

  • @user-sp4hh1tn9l
    @user-sp4hh1tn9l 8 місяців тому +1

    Awesome Vlog, thank you Allan. Im 51 and also feel like weight training is my meditation.

  • @touchtonsclc
    @touchtonsclc 8 місяців тому

    Solid work

  • @colbysullivan4415
    @colbysullivan4415 8 місяців тому

    Looking great Alan!

  • @leroemonnomoerel9462
    @leroemonnomoerel9462 8 місяців тому

    Great video! Relate to everything you said.

  • @homerdough5389
    @homerdough5389 8 місяців тому +3

    Wish the younger crowd would take this to heart. Seems like all they're interested in is your point of "only heavy weight is needed for the warriors to get strong!" mentality.
    I was the same back in the day, focusing on S/B/D and half-assing the accessories. I got stronger (at a 1RM level) at those movements back then compared to now, but my physique/motivation looks better now than it did 7 years ago, which is odd when I should be recovering "worse" now than before. And I find it more fun to do calisthenics + actually stimulate the muscle instead of hyping up myself up to do a set of 5 (which i still do for DL/Squat, since I'm a little underwhelmed by how much "strength" i lost for those movements)

  • @cafecitoconazucar
    @cafecitoconazucar 8 місяців тому

    Great video ❤

  • @bastardator6229
    @bastardator6229 8 місяців тому +3

    Go to the gym and have fun. Train hard and smile. Do your best and do better next time. Thank you for the video!! 💪

  • @azhaanebrahim4887
    @azhaanebrahim4887 8 місяців тому

    Great one😎💪🏽💯

  • @erikacook7323
    @erikacook7323 8 місяців тому +3

    This is why I'm glad I discovered powerbuilding very early on when I started lifting. I actually have always concentrated MORE on taking the accessory movements to true failure because it won't mess me up as badly as, say, blowing out my core with taking squats to failure (...ask me how I know right now 😢). Also, vanity. Lol
    I will say the slower strength gains as you get stronger, and the more frequent plateaus, get VERY frustrating with strength training. Mentally I do the exact same good day/bad day thing. It can definitely suck when missing a deadlift basically makes you feel like crap for the rest of the day.

  • @Sergio-rq2mm
    @Sergio-rq2mm 8 місяців тому +1

    I am by no means a professional as a strongman or a bodybuilder, but I do love it, and have been doing it since 2008. Coming to strongman & powerlifting after building a foundation in bodybuilding, a lot of what you are saying resonates with me. However, in my case since I came from bodybuilding, I have taken a lot of what you are saying for granted. Its really interesting to me to hear your side, coming from strength training to bodybuilding, and makes me wonder how much of this stuff we have internalized along the way, and how much it affects our performance and recovery.

  • @springpistonriflefeverlone9611
    @springpistonriflefeverlone9611 8 місяців тому +17

    I'm doing more bodybuilding now, I have always trained all of my exercises just as importantly. I never understood why the bent over barbell row was not as important as the bench press.

    • @urgamecshk
      @urgamecshk 8 місяців тому +4

      Because 135 is a lot harder than 220 on the cable stack. Bad for the ego!

    • @springpistonriflefeverlone9611
      @springpistonriflefeverlone9611 8 місяців тому +1

      @@urgamecshk Barbell, not cable.

    • @tv26889
      @tv26889 8 місяців тому

      It is you just followed to many skinny weak phags doing one arm pull-downs.

    • @skandalbanker
      @skandalbanker 8 місяців тому +1

      In starting strength the row is an assistance for bench (for advanced lifters). Bench is not just chest, it's total upper body strength (you're using the back too). The press is more important though, following starting strength philosophy

  • @Shivam_1942
    @Shivam_1942 8 місяців тому

    Great video bro

  • @jeffreywilliams6386
    @jeffreywilliams6386 8 місяців тому

    You're a solid thinker and a great writer, Alan.

  • @buckeyelevi
    @buckeyelevi 8 місяців тому +1

    Everything you said in here, particularly about powerlifting and strength lifting after 12 weeks leaving you exhausted and needing to build back up to the same weight, is why I’m about 12 weeks away from just switching to bodybuilding and not caring about numbers anymore. The stress on my body is just so much. I’m trying out Candito’s new 8 week program and so far it’s very low stress so I might be able to handle it, but I’m growing very sick of leaving a powerlifting workout exhausted, mentally and physically, having added next to nothing to the bar from the week before. At least with bodybuilding, I can do similar movements, but chase a pump and so as long as the muscle feels worked, even if I don’t feel tired, I’m good. We’ll see what happens. What I need is a good bodybuilding program that’s only 3-4 days a week and doesn’t take forever in the gym. We’ll see what happens.

  • @darthghitza8037
    @darthghitza8037 7 місяців тому +1

    Man, these last 5 months of bodybuilding is really showing on your physique. Good job 👏

  • @plork100
    @plork100 8 місяців тому

    This is your best message

  • @waltersobchak6546
    @waltersobchak6546 8 місяців тому

    Thank you, Sir!

  • @andrewtate5652
    @andrewtate5652 8 місяців тому +11

    I havent considered my workouts to be powerlifting, strongman, or bodybuilding, yet I use components of each. My only goal has been to get stronger and more efficient in my movements, to be healthy in 20 years when I have grandkids running around. Every day is a challenge and I feel privileged to be able to use my home gym. Another rep, another pound, another day. A previous comment mentioned the RP app, and that has made programming easier and more enjoyable. Just being consistent and loving the journey.

    • @adragonro
      @adragonro 8 місяців тому +1

      For me it's about doing what feels good/fun while helping my Body to stay healthy as long as I live!❤
      Keep it up for all that love U and for your own goals in life💪

  • @eitonkamelgarn9150
    @eitonkamelgarn9150 8 місяців тому +2

    Love your videos! Suggestion: show yourself entering into your log .

  • @LoveLindqvist
    @LoveLindqvist 7 місяців тому

    Very insightful

  • @krisbe11
    @krisbe11 8 місяців тому

    Love your logical and honest take on this - your passion for both forms is great. As a guy which pretty much ticks every box for what you mention in terms of burnt out, grinding to get that extra 5 on the bar, classifying days as good or bad, im sold on the idea of mixing in some body building. Next question is, what is a good, easily accessible body building programme? This video shows you doing a thousand different exercises, some of which arent even possible in my local gyms. I dont have the time or patience to relearn and would happily take an off the shelf, generic solution, at least to get me started.

  • @andreasmorin2633
    @andreasmorin2633 8 місяців тому

    great shirt from Death (10.40) and nice to get your insights to the change in training with your level of experience

  • @philipmorris6121
    @philipmorris6121 8 місяців тому +3

    I trained the big three for years before acknowledging reality slowly over time. Bench never hit my chest, just my shoulders and I couldn't progress. Squat form got super shady above three plates a side, I could hit parallel and kept progressing but my quads never felt it. Deadlift, my form off the ground, at an arbitrary height determined by plate diameter was terrible. Once locked out I could rep 200kg for reps, but that first rep was always sketchy as hell, and I never felt it in my hamstrings. Nowadays I do RDL's with a super slow eccentric to feel the stretch, I use a Prime chest press machine all set on the bottom range of motion, I feel the target muscles and perform every rep under control and with full ROM. I do pendulum and reverse hack squats which feel great on my lower back and allow me to touch hamstrings to calves and feel the effort in my quads when my knees go as far over my toes as they can whilst still keeping pressure through my heels. Beyond that my pulling, pushing and isolation exercises are all based around what feels best for the muscle and the joint. Getting stuck in a particular doctrine, BBing, Strongman, Oly, Powerlifting seems to just end up with most people who are not suited for those particular disciplines wasting effort and time pursuing goals that have no relation to their real life. Do those things if you are pursuing those goals, beyond that, take what you like from each, fit it into your programme in a manner supported by research and your own lifestyle.

  • @maxmaximum-sh4bx
    @maxmaximum-sh4bx 8 місяців тому +1

    Great physique Alan! 😃👍

  • @karlfieldhouse9331
    @karlfieldhouse9331 8 місяців тому

    This one resonated with me so much at the moment as I take a backwards step from powerlifting. Great video. Highlight, however, was Crowbar's Planets Collide playing really, really quietly in the background whilst you were doing preacher curls.

  • @franciswashack89
    @franciswashack89 8 місяців тому +4

    I combine strength training with bodybuilding and it works very well for me at 69 years of age. I started training when Sergio Oliva was Mr. Olympia, so I have years of experience. This was a very good video.

  • @austin6071
    @austin6071 8 місяців тому +3

    I really echo powerbuilding as the most psychologically rewarding way to train. There is great psychological benefit from the muscle fatigue and pump from a good bodybuilding workout, just as there is with hitting a PR deadlift.
    My sweet spot has been averaging heavy compounds overall once-twice a week or less, and then filling out the week with bodybuilding workouts and movement workouts where I use resistance bands to go through any sticking points. I’ve been hitting PRs, looking thick, and having the most fluid range of motion I’ve ever had.

    • @AnaGfit23
      @AnaGfit23 8 місяців тому

      Did you make this program/programming format completely yourself, or did you take inspiration from anybody/thing?
      I’m PL for the first time now, but did bodybuilding a while back and realize a mix is going to be the most enjoyable in the long run. (Also how I tend to train my clients, but I don’t flesh it out as much as a program for myself because general pop (non fitness fanatics) tend to be unpredictable, miss sessions, etc.

    • @zerrodefex
      @zerrodefex 8 місяців тому

      I gravitated towards this as I felt that if I was going to be strong I wanted to also look the part.

  • @Dustin_Amberg
    @Dustin_Amberg 8 місяців тому

    So thankful!

  • @pmnt_
    @pmnt_ 8 місяців тому

    It feels so good to get confirmation of that 12 weeks grind here in the video and in the comments. I walked the powerlifting path for years from 5x5 to 531. Even with all the programmed deload weeks, it seems like I couldn't run these programs for longer than 3-4 months, often failing right before the next PR. I really considered giving up lifting as a whole.
    I started a bodybulding program, week 10. Wish me luck.

  • @shmoo1000
    @shmoo1000 8 місяців тому +2

    Going through a terrible lower back injury where I've barely been able to train for the last 9 months now, your description of good and bad training days is so familiar. I can't wait to get back to training, just for the simple enjoyment of it. If my back ever does heal, I will definitely take more of a bodybuilding approach so I don't get stuck in the mentality of always having to hit big numbers and have good day (which is what led me to fracturing 2 vertebra and 3 herniated discs)

    • @minty0615
      @minty0615 18 днів тому

      If it's not prying, I'd be interested in what type of program you were doing back then, and what caused the injury?
      I just tweaked my back doing squats (have been just doing squat/press/deadlifts, SS style). Have tweaked it before and recovered quickish but this time there was sciatica that sidelined me from doing almost anything (like walking) for almost two weeks. I think it's nowhere near what you went through (will find out more about how recovered I really am later today, first workout attempt -- at very light weights). I have always struggled mightily with form on the squat (tending towards ugly good-morning squats) and with pushing it too hard and would like to hear your experience, it could reinforce that I should change my approach, maybe to more like what Alan's doing (plus I'm 67 so I should probably be extra careful).

  • @jasonhensel3929
    @jasonhensel3929 8 місяців тому

    Needed this one

  • @Hogan-sw1py
    @Hogan-sw1py 8 місяців тому

    Great video and looking friggin awesome! I started bodybuilding then got into strength/powerlifting focused training. I now try do both but do sometimes suffer the performance disappointment you mention, which makes training less enjoyable.

  • @DrewPeabawls
    @DrewPeabawls 8 місяців тому

    I love you have the thoughts of saying “sets of favhe” for the people that resonate.

  • @DPN1DPN
    @DPN1DPN 8 місяців тому

    Appreciate the perspective. As someone that is a recreational lifter, PL is fairly new to me. I enjoy lifting but need a program to follow or its just a shitshow. JugAi has been good for me the past couple years. While hitting new maxes is the goal, avoiding injury is most important -I’m 56. This approach tempers my max effort a bit, but I know my limits. I like the accessories. The only bad days for me are when I don’t finish them. I superset them often to finish strong. Thanks for sharing. It’s motivational 💪

  • @sonicwave32
    @sonicwave32 8 місяців тому +1

    I definitely enjoy the flexibility that comes with not being attached to the Big 3 (or 6) Lifts, very useful in crowded gyms where you can't afford to wait for equipment.

  • @porqpine53
    @porqpine53 8 місяців тому

    That handstand push-up rig with the bands you got there is elite. Never seen that before

  • @ZevAidikoff
    @ZevAidikoff 8 місяців тому

    Love yah alan

  • @liamhowatt5342
    @liamhowatt5342 8 місяців тому +15

    That first point resonates with me. Its nicer mentally to just try and get a pump instead of worrying about performance

    • @tv26889
      @tv26889 8 місяців тому +1

      Pump doesn’t equate with overload. You have to keep performance up on the exercises you choose whether you’re a physique athlete or strength athlete.

  • @garethjudd5840
    @garethjudd5840 8 місяців тому

    I've competed in power lifting and strongman for 40 years. I did a side plank Clam shell for the first time yesterday. You are never to old to learn new things.

  • @perhaarberg6809
    @perhaarberg6809 8 місяців тому

    That’s what I like about mixing strength and builder focused training.
    Always some progress in one way or another

  • @AntonisK27
    @AntonisK27 8 місяців тому +3

    The thing with strength is that it is a skill. And as any skill, dedicated practice of it in large and intense amounts will best train this skill. To be able to support this practice one of course has to do supplementary training, like powerlifters do hypertrophy accessories for example. To get the best amount of practice approaching the competition however this supplementary training needs to be reduced to a bare minimum such that performance can be maximised for the planned competition. This is how periodisation works. It might not be as apparent for powerlifters or strongmen, but peaking into a competition you might be really prepared for what you were training for but you are losing fitness in so many other things. It is completely normal. Getting attached to certain numbers or performances is an illusion of the past.

  • @Pablo-sz8xn
    @Pablo-sz8xn 8 місяців тому

    My dude you perfectly summarized my love for the gym.

  • @ayda2876
    @ayda2876 8 місяців тому

    Oh man i love this video