What Are the Theoretical Limits of Human Strength?

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

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  • @AlexanderBromley
    @AlexanderBromley  Рік тому +285

    BaseStrengthAI is more reliable than a coach, cheaper than an Excel template!👇👇👇
    www.BaseStrength.com/the-app
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    • @calebworden2993
      @calebworden2993 Рік тому +4

      You should look Dennis Rogers and Kevin fast

    • @calebworden2993
      @calebworden2993 Рік тому +2

      And you said it's a parlor trick for you guys to lift a car well it may be a parlor trick for you guys but for in every day woman it's pretty crazy and also how do you know she didn't lift the car 4 inches where you there did you see it

    • @AlexanderBromley
      @AlexanderBromley  Рік тому +13

      ​@@calebworden2993 good god I hope you are never on a jury.

    • @calebworden2993
      @calebworden2993 Рік тому +1

      How can you say something didn't happen if you didn't see I wouldn't say did and then Wednesday didn't cuz I don't have any certain permission to know

    • @calebworden2993
      @calebworden2993 Рік тому

      And yeah they're going to be stupid people who do stupid things but you don't discount what everybody says because of some stupid people that seems to be your whole reasoning for why you don't believe this lady because what does lady said people are doing dumb things that's not the fault of lady that's the fault of the dumb people

  • @Uncle_Tijikun
    @Uncle_Tijikun Рік тому +8404

    I will no longer refer to myself as fat, I'll forever be "heavily marbled"
    Thank you, Alex.

  • @IsaacG8
    @IsaacG8 Рік тому +1219

    I love how this video compared comic book characters with real life human lifters, discussed scientific subjects such as genetic and sexual dimorphism, and eventually ended on sci-fi-esque bionics and gene editing as possible solution to increase a human's upper limits. Great video. I'm truly impressed.

    • @medvidekmisa
      @medvidekmisa Рік тому

      is it so scifi if we already able to breed and edit genes at animals to gain muscles like crazy ? (google belgian blue cow) myostatine blockers are insane.

    • @ojeritoayala
      @ojeritoayala Рік тому +26

      and don't forget to add the morality of gene editing

    • @servantes3291
      @servantes3291 Рік тому +5

      Yeah there was a lot of thought put into this, I liked it a lot

    • @kwamea.n1723
      @kwamea.n1723 Рік тому +14

      scientific way uses kilograms not pounds but yeah cool stuff

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Рік тому

      Lies again? AIA Money High School

  • @cuthwulf
    @cuthwulf Рік тому +1507

    I think the "endurance thing" is glossed over and overlooked. Primitive humans with the capacity to communicate advanced tactics and their incredible endurance were nightmare fuel. Imagine you're a gorilla...yeah you can beatdown anything. One on one. And most other animals attacked one at a time or if they did come in groups, they could easily be scared away or would give up if there seemed to be a long battle ahead because of the caloric requirements would outweigh the need to fight that long for food. But here come those damn humans again...tools/spears in hand. They don't scare as easy and only peer at you from a distance as you try and scurry away from the large group of them. You run over a hill, your gorilla heart moving your massive frame. No worries, most animals would give up by now. You turn around...all 20 peering from around trees. On and on...until you're so exhausted all you can do is snarl and growl and they start closing in, throwing spears and darting away.
    Most people don't realize that even modern day marathoners can easily outrun a horse for distance over a day.

    • @random.3665
      @random.3665 11 місяців тому +450

      Great point. I once heard someone (i think it was a biologist, but im not certain there) refer to it as the same level of horror that a zombie horde would give a human. It was in the context of most mammals being four-legged and furry. With their four legs, they could easily outperform humans in terms of speed and acceleration. But - just like a horde of zombies - the humans would never stop chasing you. They cant sprint up to you by matching your speed, but whenever you would stop to rest (and most importantly, cool back down, since most animals actually have to rest to regulate body temperature back down, rather than being 100% exhausted muscle-wise), they are still running after you.
      You cant loose them easily, since their human eyes can see you at distance, and their upright way of walking means they can see above the gras/vegetation. They dont overheat like you do, since they have less fur and have a built-in cooling system (sweating). And their intelligence and social proclivity makes it almost impossible to scare them off when they are in a group. Eventually, you WILL have to rest, and by the time you would be recovered, they have already reached you....
      Nature is terrifying in a lot of ways, but i think a lot of people underestimate how terrifying our human ancestors had to be in order to conquer nature they way they ended up doing.

    • @mishXY
      @mishXY 11 місяців тому +146

      @@random.3665 damn right! also the fact that humans could hunt without projectiles, simply by chasing an animal to die of exhaustion, is insane. and then comes the fact that we can pretty precisely launch deadly projectiles MUUUUUUCH further than anything alive is also crazy. the strongest gorilla can throw a rock maybe 10-15m/33-50ft with abysmal precision.

    • @ObsidianRadio
      @ObsidianRadio 11 місяців тому +123

      Homo Sapiens are in a weird space. We were/are the most efficient hunters in the animal kingdom yet we're also the easiest prey animal. Most people don't like to think about it obviously, but many researchers gloss over the fact that homo sapiens were hunted by many different predators for eons because in the right circumstances we're actually quite easy to kill.

    • @danielragsdale9849
      @danielragsdale9849 11 місяців тому +35

      @@ObsidianRadioTrue, I can only imagine a reason a lot of animals don’t target us has nothing to do with how hard it would be and everything to do with fears of thing that won’t happen. We have incredibly unique advantages, but we’re not anywhere close to perfect at all.

    • @random.3665
      @random.3665 11 місяців тому +101

      @@ObsidianRadio Its one of the traits of being a social species.
      One of us alone is easy prey. A group of our species is the most lethal hunting force on the planet.

  • @gymenjoyer-y3q
    @gymenjoyer-y3q Місяць тому +1575

    A book that changed my life in ways that I never could imagine is "Secret Testosterone Nexus of Evolution".Drop whatever you're doing right now and go find that book. Trust me after I implemented things from the book my testosterone levels went beast mode

  • @findango
    @findango Рік тому +1327

    I think the human limit is actually determined by the ability of the body to tolerate mass, and the difficult/stressful road it takes to get to those levels. Meaning the heart, kidney, liver etc. The fact that strongmen require CPAP machines to avoid serious side effects once higher sizes are achieved, is an indication of artificially surpassing natural limits. Along with new equipment, nutrition, rehabilitation/rest options, pharmaceutical, and even eventually DNA modification. That's where it's going to stop once all these options are exhausted.

    • @phalanx8437
      @phalanx8437 Рік тому

      In our current form we're near the ceiling, this milque-toast fantasy "if you just train or believe hard enough!" Is absolute cringe intellectual denialism at best.
      To surpass our current numbers in large meaningful ways i.e: the average "man" can now lift a car we need what you said, drastic DNA modification to an unrecognisable degree.
      Sci-Fi shit, we wouldn't even look like homosapiens anymore.

    • @morsumbra9692
      @morsumbra9692 Рік тому +116

      CyberPunk soldiers won't happen cuz Terminator robots are easier to produce at scale. The military really really really wanted em and I even worked on some caloric research with them but the same reason they ditched the dolphin kamikaze idea for better torpedoes we'll have robots instead of biomods unless its for personal consumerism imo.

    • @adamplentl5588
      @adamplentl5588 Рік тому +103

      ​​​@@morsumbra9692Cyberpunk soldiers won't happen *at scale.* but even with the advent of mass production death robots you'd still have a few human cyborgs running around for things that require that special touch. Sometimes you just need a couple of fellas to get in an out. The solution to all strategic issues is not massed arms.

    • @morsumbra9692
      @morsumbra9692 Рік тому +24

      @@adamplentl5588 I could totally see it. Maybe as a phase, maybe as the unique wetworkers. Maybe even as the weakness of the robots as we've seen cardboard kamikaze drones are more effective than jets in unique instances.

    • @Milliardo55
      @Milliardo55 Рік тому +69

      The limit is determined largely by biology and anatomy. That's the long and short of it. We're not built like gorillas. Even if we could theoretically increase muscle mass and muscle fibers by limiting myostatin, there is still our bone structure to contend with. Again we're not built like gorillas, who have both the muscle and bone structure to exert much force. The only way we can equal or surpass gorillas is to practically build a man from the ground up to be like one--that would require a lot of genetic manipulation, and I don't think we're at that level yet to create a super soldier like Steve Rogers.

  • @samwilliams7814
    @samwilliams7814 Рік тому +478

    5:12 lost it when he said "this is an average male" and dropped a pic of destiny lmao

    • @riteshyeddu
      @riteshyeddu Рік тому +10

      yeah lol

    • @voicesbyjwanjordan
      @voicesbyjwanjordan 11 місяців тому +47

      I had to do a double take because I thought I was tripping LOL!

    • @MaxiAnime-nf8pu
      @MaxiAnime-nf8pu 11 місяців тому +11

      He said whos Been in the gym for a year

    • @TheMopar181990
      @TheMopar181990 11 місяців тому +16

      @@voicesbyjwanjordan Also had to rewatch it. That was a great diss. Got a good laugh from it

    • @SuperSecretAgentNein
      @SuperSecretAgentNein 11 місяців тому +4

      Did not expect that haha

  • @learnova1761
    @learnova1761 Рік тому +555

    As someone in no way involved in the fitness/lifting community, but has an immense interest in biology and morphology, this video was incredibly interesting and I learned a lot of cool new stuff. Thank you very much!

    • @TheBoxingCannabyte
      @TheBoxingCannabyte Рік тому +4

      As someone who loves your cat avatar, and also shARES the same interest, let me give you some virtual pecan pie, sir/ma'am/they/them/goat-fiend, whatever your b inary or non-binary, you look like you would enjoy some pecan pie.

    • @pipthewarrior3738
      @pipthewarrior3738 Рік тому +24

      @@TheBoxingCannabyte bruh

    • @CoralCopperHead
      @CoralCopperHead Рік тому +12

      @@TheBoxingCannabyte I'm sure your enthusiasm comes from a genuine place, but uh... dial it back a bit. Sometimes allies can be more embarrassing than those of us who are aggressively stereotypical.

    • @CeeWorld69
      @CeeWorld69 Рік тому +5

      Now go exercise........thank you

    • @DanielBrennan-xl8hg
      @DanielBrennan-xl8hg Рік тому +1

      ​@@CoralCopperHead😂😂that made my day that comment and I was checking to see if cat avatar was female cos he sounde thirsty 😂😂

  • @folanthewolftamer7526
    @folanthewolftamer7526 Рік тому +202

    Would personally love a deep dive on ancient human strength and methods available to them at the time, and what limits would come from that. Could be interesting. Anyway, great video.

    • @MF-kr4hf
      @MF-kr4hf 11 місяців тому +10

      They had to exercise all day every day, and ate unprocessed fats and foods, so they were as fit, healthy, and strong as possible, I'd imagine..

    • @AdamMclardy
      @AdamMclardy 11 місяців тому

      @@MF-kr4hfapart from the hard access to great food and the work not being about building fitness but meeting a quota so they worked only exactly enough as they needed to to get that day’s calories and shelter

    • @tucosalamanca5818
      @tucosalamanca5818 10 місяців тому +31

      @@MF-kr4hfyeah but resources were much scarcer so they didn't always get a ton of protein, most of hunting entailed long distance pursuits so they're mainly doing cardio rather than weight training, and also they didn't have access to spotify playlists to motivate them which are all factors that may limit them

    • @al-imranadore1182
      @al-imranadore1182 9 місяців тому +6

      ​@@MF-kr4hfThey were more efficient but not stronger than modern athletes.

    • @davidryke113
      @davidryke113 9 місяців тому +7

      @@al-imranadore1182 They hunted mammoths with sharpened sticks. Would love to see an athlete hunt a full grown elephant with a sharpened stick.

  • @205Raven
    @205Raven Рік тому +310

    Alexander I am not a lifter and am not interested in it. But my hat is off to you for your presentation and thoroughness. Your topic-building, timing, subject breakdown, and analytic compliment make for a top-notch educator. I hope the people watching this understand the time, attention and genuine professionalism you put into this video. Thanks.

    • @Iam1nsane
      @Iam1nsane Рік тому +8

      My exact thoughts. The video has the ability to keep somebody in there not really aiming to use it for self goal. That is a winning content creator. If this guy was a stock, the call is long him.

    • @alexandrupatru2892
      @alexandrupatru2892 Рік тому +1

      So true. It was very researched, very detailed and crystal clear explained, as well as so well video edited. Better than any documentary I have seen so far on this subject matter. Hat off for the tons of work that went into this!

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks4395 Рік тому +358

    Thanks for doing this, a lot people don't appreciate the factors that go into strength. One of the prime examples in nature are bears. They have short limbs and bodies that are arched. This makes it so they have far better leverage for swipes and wrestling. Even with the same muscle mass as a human, their force generation is higher along certain axis than we can generate. It's useful to remember that strength is more complex than people realize.

    • @IndependenOnesTV
      @IndependenOnesTV Рік тому +3

      No it’s not it’s called effort and roids.

    • @Handle35667
      @Handle35667 Рік тому

      It’s called steroids. Steroids go into it

    • @corvidconsumer
      @corvidconsumer Рік тому +36

      @@IndependenOnesTV the hell are you talking about

    • @Nightdiver20
      @Nightdiver20 Рік тому +22

      @@IndependenOnesTV Go outside, get some sunshine, and pick up something heavy. Repeat.

    • @fastcow7013
      @fastcow7013 Рік тому +14

      @@IndependenOnesTV lift the bed you sleep on before you type something like this

  • @DarkVeghetta
    @DarkVeghetta Рік тому +286

    Excellent video. Well researched, well spoken, well edited.
    Much like our collective deadlifts, Bromley's video quality has definitely gone up over the years.

    • @bathyalgames
      @bathyalgames Рік тому +6

      In my opinion this is currently the best video, that cleans up a lot of nonsense and educates the right things.

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +2

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

    • @DarkVeghetta
      @DarkVeghetta Рік тому +1

      @@roncaruso931 I'm not sure you're replying to the correct comment. I wasn't talking about any specific lifters and ofc they're on PEDs - the point is to see what the human body is capable of, not go full natty.

  • @EmoEmu
    @EmoEmu 10 місяців тому +19

    I love this video. This is insane quality and packed with GOOD information. I appreciate this existing.

  • @Comicsluvr
    @Comicsluvr Рік тому +442

    I'm a licensed massage therapist and it pleases me to see an accurate, technical breakdown of how muscles actually work. Well done!

    • @thegael791
      @thegael791 Рік тому +17

      Glorified protitute.

    • @fuckyachickenstrips
      @fuckyachickenstrips Рік тому

      ​@thegael791 you're just mad that you're too ugly to get a happy ending. Touch grass.

    • @jasonalen7459
      @jasonalen7459 Рік тому +11

      @@thegael791 Ah yes, and life-drawing turns artists into glorified voyeurs.
      🤦‍♂

    • @thegael791
      @thegael791 Рік тому

      @@jasonalen7459 Yeah they all try to mask their creepiness with "professionalism". Anyone with half a brain cell knows it's at least 50 percent sexual lmao. Running your hands all over a strangers body with oil is a scummy and degrading job. Would never lower myself.

    • @BungieStudios
      @BungieStudios 6 місяців тому

      Thank you for your service. 🫡🇺🇸🏋️🏻‍♂️

  • @domls1317
    @domls1317 Рік тому +57

    This channel is a hidden gem! Alexander is an amazing narrator!

    • @ericflynn6541
      @ericflynn6541 Рік тому

      Great presentation and a phenomenal radio voice ❤

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

  • @strongerandwiser2023
    @strongerandwiser2023 Рік тому +128

    Grusome some of those clips you included of bone breaks and tendons going. I was not ready for that man!

    • @tappajaav
      @tappajaav 10 місяців тому +31

      Those people who broke bones and tendons were not ready for it either

    • @WilliamJohnson-bo7rm
      @WilliamJohnson-bo7rm 7 місяців тому +8

      Me too man, that shit scared me😂

    • @adrianharrison5208
      @adrianharrison5208 7 місяців тому +4

      I was just about to go to bed, guess I'll be watching this now instead

    • @drewishgaminginc.3942
      @drewishgaminginc.3942 3 місяці тому

      That one dude in the yellow shirt probably died

    • @joewatson8782
      @joewatson8782 3 місяці тому

      @@drewishgaminginc.3942 thank god, it's fake, i thought it was but i'm glad to confirm it ua-cam.com/users/shortsqGGUhjd59Uw

  • @snarfsnarfff
    @snarfsnarfff 11 місяців тому +94

    7:56 The chimp helping that man up the tree was just so wholesome.

  • @rickhess8006
    @rickhess8006 Рік тому +184

    Absolutely phenomenal video!!!
    I don’t think most people have any idea what it takes to put something like this together. As a gym owner, personal trainer, power lifter and scholar that’s been obsessed with this sport for 34 years and has read everything strength, nutrition and bodybuilding I could gt my hands on for as long as I can remember and I’m now working on creating my own UA-cam channel, I have the utmost respect for you.
    Very cool video! 5 star, perfect 10!
    Keep up the great work! 👌

    • @beentheredonethat5908
      @beentheredonethat5908 Рік тому +8

      Nice! I have studied fitness, strengh, powerlifting and bodybuilding for 30 years. I've seen the human body do things that everyone claims isn't possible, most done in prison, bad food, no supplements or drugs, just time, repetitive training, and incredibly high stress levels. Honestly, there are men in prisons across the USA, I'm sure other places as well, that can smash the current records in almost every weight class, all clean with no anabolic drugs. I myself cane home after 14 years and could out lift and train longer and harder then anyone in the gyms, many far bigger and more muscler then myself. I don't have great genetics , I'm not big, and even now at 44 years old, I can still lift more then other mem half my age, although I'm not capable of what I once was. I'd love some serious research into why this happens , how its possible, because I was FAR from the strongest guy in there, not even close to mamy of the men, and if we can find out what that factor is, we can enhance training and give more natural athletes an advantage. The fitness community talks at times about the builds that come out of prison, but no one has actually done research, bloodwork, mental edge or any other real dive into why or how this is possible. If the powerlifting records from these places were actually researched, most records would definitely be held by incarcerated men, maybe thats why, idk, but it's worth the research for the next generation of lifters to tap into this, and maybe keep the ped use down.

    • @zakzwijn8410
      @zakzwijn8410 Рік тому +1

      What is your opinion on Tongkat Ali and Fadogia Agrestis?

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +1

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

    • @breaknfiction21
      @breaknfiction21 Рік тому

      Been working out for 4 years regularly attempting to progressively overload, but I plateau after just 1 year. I actually start to get weaker, every time I hit that “ceiling”. I look like the guy in the video who represents the average guy after two months of training. I actually have the worst genetics

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому

      @@breaknfiction21 Take some steroids or PEDs like the pros do.

  • @smh9902
    @smh9902 Рік тому +90

    I'm a mechanical engineer. I'm working on a power generator to make one of these exosuits you're talking about. The limiting factor for power armor, currently, is energy density. Exosuits work but require a lot of power/energy. Consequently, they can only run for very short time periods. Batteries don't have the energy density, and oil has the energy density but current generation ICE engines that are sufficiently efficient enough to power them can't be downscaled to fit on or in a suit. This challenge will eventually be overcome, potentially very soon.
    That being said, being athletic and in shape won't go away. If you can lift a thousand pounds, an exosuit will simply add how much you can lift. Remember, hydraulic pumps and rams also have limitations as well. When they are stressed to their limits, it will require additional strength from the guy piloting the suit. And unlike humans, hydraulic pumps and rams are unable to push past their limits. Their engineered limits are absolute and known.

    • @magicmallet5800
      @magicmallet5800 Рік тому +2

      I've thought about the problem in terms of size and capability to move such a suit. I have an idea of using a 2-stroke engine with a fuel pump that turns a small electric generator that has a capacitor and battery to smooth out and make power delivery more consistent. Probably not a very good idea but eh, it's another idea.

    • @smh9902
      @smh9902 Рік тому +1

      @@magicmallet5800 Thats basically what I'm doing, but I have a very special 2T engine made specifically for the job. Hydraulic pump on one side, electric generator on the other.

    • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
      @rightwingsafetysquad9872 Рік тому +2

      @@magicmallet5800 The only real problem I see with that idea is having 2-stroke exhaust following you around all day. I’m sure there’s a solution out there, but it’s going to require a lot of refinement.

    • @magicmallet5800
      @magicmallet5800 Рік тому +1

      @rightwingsafetysquad9872 very true. That would be a problem and thus require the suit be sealed, which wouldn't be too bad a thing. You could also use propane or some other clean burning gas like they use in the floor polishers at the store I work at. They use a 4 stroke vertical shift v-twin engine for it but the fumes are minimal despite its size. That could work I believe, though even then there would be SOME fumes.

    • @smh9902
      @smh9902 Рік тому +2

      @@rightwingsafetysquad9872 I've solved the problem, the emissions on my prototypes are cleaner than a poppet valve 4T.

  • @logangrimnar3800
    @logangrimnar3800 Рік тому +155

    I've never seen anyone address the issue of attachment points before, which always surprised me. It seems feasible (in theory) to surgically modify the bone for increased leverage. A wider epiphysis or carefully grafted sesmoid bone would increase the moment arm and thus total strength.

    • @JustSomeGuy69420
      @JustSomeGuy69420 Рік тому +70

      Hell yeah. I'm gonna get my bicep tendon attached to the distal end of my radius, so i can hammer curl 300 pounds with my weird webbed arm.

    • @logangrimnar3800
      @logangrimnar3800 Рік тому +12

      @JustSomeGuy69420 lol not that extreme, but apes do have lower attachment points. But the biggest improvement would come from wider epiphysis and sesmoid bones

    • @charlesterrizzi8311
      @charlesterrizzi8311 Рік тому +24

      Oh please don’t give bodybuilders any ideas

    • @TheRiquelmeONE
      @TheRiquelmeONE Рік тому +23

      pretty sure some armwrestlers who tore their biceps did something like that already with some minor success. They basically let surgeons optimize the attachment points.

    • @morsumbra9692
      @morsumbra9692 Рік тому +1

      Baseball has a common surgery for this called the Tommy John Surgery to make pitching faster.
      A few crazy scientists also did a lot of research about doing it to the gastroc to run faster like cheetahs.
      Eventually we'll have CyberPunk soldiers with biomodifications and steroids

  • @eggimage
    @eggimage 11 місяців тому +4

    amazing video with so much scientific knowledge in it!
    but what’s with that in 21:03 was that a real incident? that’s fking terrifying

  • @dkratos2640
    @dkratos2640 Рік тому +105

    I started lifting when I was 47 and I'm 50 now when I started I hadn't worked out since I was 26 but I already had pretty jacked shoulders and I believe it was my job...I built fences, swinging a pick ax and using post hole diggers for 20 years which leads me to say consistency is key

    • @Mratet
      @Mratet Рік тому

      why do you sound like a 12 yr

    • @rel8m868
      @rel8m868 Рік тому +5

      ive been lifting for 5 years but ive seen my best shoulder and arm gains so far in just the last few months after starting a hard labour job, all the cardio has made me leaner too while maintaining my muscle and gaining strength. fuck office jobs

    • @tilt6715
      @tilt6715 Рік тому

      You really are Kratos

    • @Speeder84XL
      @Speeder84XL Рік тому +2

      Yes - that have indeed helped some.
      If your goal is to build strength, working is quite inefficient, compared to how much time you spend on it though. Strength is built most effiently by putting maximum effort for shorter periods and resting - not by doing "low intensity work out" for like 8 hour, 5 days a week.
      You sometimes also get the problem of building uneven strength. Work that requires both strength and precision is the worst. That's where we see people with totally skewed strength, like for example the grip strength being 20% higher in the dominant hand, than the other.
      But work can still build quite a bit of strength under the right conditions - and in any case, it's way better than being a couch potato.

    • @dkratos2640
      @dkratos2640 Рік тому +3

      Probably explains why my shoulders were jacked but I still had man boobs, lol

  • @jarenthielen6185
    @jarenthielen6185 Рік тому +48

    Big fan Bromley. More theoretical please.

  • @bmstylee
    @bmstylee Рік тому +169

    Watching Lasha snatch 225kg and c&j 266kg is probably the most insane thing I have ever seen. He makes it look effortless.

    • @iceborned2019
      @iceborned2019 Рік тому +5

      fingers crossed that we see the 500kg total in the next couple of years

    • @snakesolidhb
      @snakesolidhb Рік тому +9

      thank you for translating the video to european XD was lost with the pounds

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +4

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

    • @misutatomasu
      @misutatomasu Рік тому

      @@roncaruso931 Literally every single athlete in top 1000 of every sport is on PEDs. You are delusional and know nothin about the subject.

    • @ghoulbuster1
      @ghoulbuster1 11 місяців тому +2

      @@roncaruso931 Yeah no shiet bro everyone knows.

  • @TheFailLord72
    @TheFailLord72 3 місяці тому +7

    That shot @ Destiny 5:15 gave me a sensible chuckle

  • @Adam-tp8py
    @Adam-tp8py Рік тому +29

    10:36 absolutely true.
    I was very, very overweight (around 160kg) 2 years ago. I lost lots of it, and found that my joints were not in great condition. My muscles had been primed to carry and pull huge amounts (160kg (90kg bodyweight + 70kg added)+ pullups, dips, muscle ups etc. with next to no training, easily. But, within weeks of hitting these numbers quite quickly after I had lost weight, my tendons and joints were knackered. It's been about a year since I started calisthenics, and I still haven't gone back to those numbers. I can, but it's just plain stupid until my frame catches up.

  • @fareselk.4096
    @fareselk.4096 Рік тому +16

    So am I the only one who flinched at 21:00 ........?

    • @Metryk
      @Metryk 8 місяців тому +4

      Wondering if it's even real. If so... yeah, fuck that

    • @cancercentral9997
      @cancercentral9997 Місяць тому +2

      ​@@Metryk I think it jumpcuts to a dummy

  • @BirrrrrdandCat
    @BirrrrrdandCat Рік тому +50

    You really showed all the muscle breaks and tendon snaps. I salute you

    • @calamorta
      @calamorta Рік тому +4

      Yeah, stuff like 21:03 is usually what other UA-camrs would tell we shouldn't search for it lol

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +2

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

    • @magnanimouscontributor881
      @magnanimouscontributor881 Рік тому +9

      ​@@calamortaIt looks fake

    • @IceDunker-2000
      @IceDunker-2000 Рік тому

      @@calamorta that was brutal

    • @SetTheCurve
      @SetTheCurve Рік тому

      Yeah, I applaud for this. Every now and then as I’m approaching a 1rm I think about “what if this is when my shit pops”. Keeps me a bit realistic. It’s good for people to understand the risk

  • @random.3665
    @random.3665 11 місяців тому +20

    Absolutely amazing analysis. Knowledgeable, calm, collected, with an interesting outlook into the future. This is the first video i saw on your channel, and it absolutely makes me excited to check out your others. Very nice work, thank you!

  • @The_Forseti
    @The_Forseti Рік тому +7

    This video and this man’s sense of humor and the understated, almost monotone way in which it’s delivered are all amazing.

  • @dalequale9365
    @dalequale9365 Рік тому +47

    I'm 68 and back in the gym. I agree, the scaffolding of bones, tendons and ligaments are first and foremost.
    I'm lifting linear progression and so for so good.
    Enough lean muscle mass is MY goal, NOT the most.💪🙏

  • @theinformedtoast3377
    @theinformedtoast3377 Рік тому +18

    Love the nuanced way you tackled the topic, no bias or anything. Keep it up 👍

  • @Rockymoutaincatahoula
    @Rockymoutaincatahoula 5 місяців тому +1

    Oh man! I’m so happy that I found this channel. These are truly the deep dives the young guys need to hear to make the most of their most formative years. The video about the history of bodybuilding is so spot on. Arnold was such a big deal to me and just about everyone else I know inspired to do the same. Great content. Expect to hear lots from me.

  • @johnjames2626
    @johnjames2626 Рік тому +10

    Great deal of information. Lifelong study in 30 minutes. Very profound. Pragmatic , but profound. Congratulations!

    • @ivoryas1696
      @ivoryas1696 Рік тому +1

      johnjames2626
      The Bromely standard. 🦾

  • @brettbanta2100
    @brettbanta2100 Рік тому +380

    Ive always wondered how strong Andre the giant coukd have been if he'd taken loads of gear and trained accordingly. His totals would have been unbeatable

    • @yimpyoi9808
      @yimpyoi9808 Рік тому +206

      i think you, and this video, are missing an important factor. the human organs have to be able to support a a high performance body like that, and those organs already struggle in these obscenely strong 400 lb men. if a guy like andre the giant took PEDs, he very likely would have died from heart complications even earlier than he did.

    • @buck_X
      @buck_X Рік тому +55

      @g.dalfleblanc63 In fairness, his death was because his genetic condition was progressive. Higher stresses might have pushed him to his breaking point earlier, but the impact of going on gear until his numbers started dropping then giving it up permanently would likely be fairly minor. You look at pictures of Andre at 20 and it's night and day compared with his misshapen face in the final years.

    • @mainsource8030
      @mainsource8030 Рік тому

      i wouldnt be suprised if bolt was on gear@g.dalfleblanc63

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +9

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

    • @ilyarepin7750
      @ilyarepin7750 Рік тому +19

      lol if you think Usain Bolt never used gear

  • @TheMrDarius
    @TheMrDarius Рік тому +24

    I absolutely love how you break it down scientifically and also make it understandable to your entire audience. I’m now a new subscriber lol

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

  • @Ironpancakemoose
    @Ironpancakemoose 2 місяці тому +2

    8:17 While we cant run as fast as any other animal on the planet, we can sprint for far longer than vast majority of animals. Thanks to our ability to sweat, and the endurance of our muscles.

  • @RussellRussell-wy2om
    @RussellRussell-wy2om Рік тому +7

    This is the most interesting and sensical explanation to how muscles work and understanding human limits that I've ever seen. Clean and concise explanations that a non-weightlifter such as I can understand. Awesome!

  • @Jayantsays
    @Jayantsays Рік тому +12

    Informative, engaging and thought provoking! Very well put together video, as a physiotherapist i will recommend this to my juniors, students of anatomy and everyone who is athlete, active in workout, gym coach etc.
    keep up the good work mate.

  • @reesespieces3379
    @reesespieces3379 Рік тому +59

    This video was exceptionally done well. I am watching it later again with my gf who is also into lifting and sport performance. Absolutely masterpiece in information, presentation and editing! Keep up the great work!

    • @zsahe21
      @zsahe21 Рік тому +2

    • @mauort6870
      @mauort6870 Рік тому +3

      agreed

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +1

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

    • @Koduku5150
      @Koduku5150 Рік тому +1

      @@roncaruso931 Ron got a touch of the broken record syndrome...just keeps repeating himself over and over...

  • @woodnbassmentproductions1429
    @woodnbassmentproductions1429 10 місяців тому +4

    Man, what an awesome video! You debunked a load of myths with facts, dove deep into the science of the human body AND mind, and nailed it with the lady lifting the car thing.
    One of the most informative and interesting videos I’ve seen in quite some time.
    Subscribing now!

    • @ivoryas1696
      @ivoryas1696 7 місяців тому

      @woodnbassmentproductions1429
      Heh, me several months ago.

  • @aidaaww3
    @aidaaww3 Рік тому +25

    I’ve been the same weight for the past 3 years and always wondered what i was missing. i’m not someone looking to get big but this helps with everything i thought i knew about human anatomy. loved this video!!

    • @1sydeee
      @1sydeee Рік тому +3

      U have been the same weight either becsuse you dont workout or have a fast metabolism so u dont gain weight

    • @grantleach8421
      @grantleach8421 11 місяців тому +1

      You gotta eat

    • @BaronNate
      @BaronNate 10 місяців тому +1

      I was like that in high school. I weighed 130 and had been lifting weights since seventh grade. I couldn't gain an ounce of size but gained lots of strength. Then after I joined the Army and could eat all I wanted with no limit, I STILL didn't gain an ounce, just more strength. Then I turned 30, everything changed. I shot up in size in a matter of a couple years, I shot up to 200 lbs. and was strong A.F. But I slowed down a lot and my metabolism did as well and now it takes forever to lose a pound of weight when I couldn't gain it for anything before. Trust me, your metabolism will slow down if you are young, and by what you said, I'm just about sure you are young, early 20s at most, right?

  • @OleSevers
    @OleSevers Рік тому +7

    Bro this video is like insanely well edited and informative. I’m very impressed. Keep making content please.

  • @robkorczak
    @robkorczak Рік тому +14

    I don't lift, I'm more of a cardio guy but every time you put out one of these types of videos I'm transfixed. Keep up the good work.

    • @Skoopyghost
      @Skoopyghost Рік тому +2

      Kettlebell/jumproper guy here. The injuries in power lifting is something that I wouldn't like to deal with. It's still badass.

  • @mpiloz8016
    @mpiloz8016 Рік тому +5

    I always knew Marius was special, he was always my favourite lifter back when I still followed the sport.

  • @DrinkingStar
    @DrinkingStar Рік тому +20

    This is the most complete, most scientific and most honest discussion on this topic that I've ever come across. After viewing this video, I think you left out the title you should be given: Doctor of Exercise.......Alexander Bromley D.E. You are the most knowledgeable person I know of on this this, and this includes my college professors, all of whom can certainly learn from you.
    In researching material for my Master's thesis("The Effect of Canned Tuna as a Nutritional Supplement on the Physique Enhancement of Individuals Engaged in Intense Weight Training") in human nutrition, I have to agree with all that you said concerning scientific research in this realm of study.
    As for my background to validate what I have stated above, I am a 78 year old "natural for life" bodybuilder who has been lifting for 60 years. I have trained in a "hardcore" gym whose members were powerlifters and bodybuilders, the vast majority of whom were "on the juice". I am a retired teacher having taught biology, chemistry and human anatomy & physiology for 38 years. I have won bodybuilding titles on the regional and national level both in "tested" and "untested" contests.
    P.S. I am dyslexic. So please excuse any typos.

    • @idrinkmilk282
      @idrinkmilk282 Рік тому +1

      No. Lol. Doctor? Lol no. Dude doesn't even have a comprehensive understanding of the language he's speaking.

  • @JustSomeGuy69420
    @JustSomeGuy69420 Рік тому +48

    21:02.... I WASNT READY FOR THAT!!! 😩😩😩

    • @Rightbackatchya
      @Rightbackatchya 6 місяців тому +5

      I haven't seen anyone fold like that!

    • @bog2k3
      @bog2k3 6 місяців тому +5

      was that even real ?!?!

    • @mukulmehra007
      @mukulmehra007 5 місяців тому +2

      Edited..🤣🤣
      Watched 2nd time to confirm it...

  • @Tryfieldanimas
    @Tryfieldanimas Рік тому +105

    As a former gymnast, I have always wondered where the limit is on the rings in terms of static strength parts. Over the years, I have always seen new exercise parts that I previously considered unthinkable. Thanks to the latest technology as well as good nutritional science, one is now able to perform the unthinkable. who knows what will come in the distant future. bones will probably still break, but maybe you can make them grow thicker. That was a very interesting and informative video. Thank you and greetings 😉

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +2

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

    • @justroberto7646
      @justroberto7646 Рік тому +3

      ​@@roncaruso931I doubt he was natural

    • @Lordmewtwo151
      @Lordmewtwo151 9 місяців тому +2

      Regarding the point on the bones: That will, of course, probably bring other disadvantages. As a person would be denser, they might not be able to swim as well. And on a more serious note, if bones are more dense, perhaps the bone marrow may become less efficient at producing the required blood cells.

    • @LetHimRead
      @LetHimRead 2 місяці тому

      @@roncaruso931 A 1700 lbs squat is impossible as of right now, let alone without PEDs or drugs, LOL. How naive are you? I have seen you comment this nonsense several times. You claim all strongmen, athletes etc. are on steroids and that is true for 99% of them, perhaps 100%, but somehow Mr. Paul Anderson outlifts every modern non equipped squat record (done by people on PEDs)? Funny.

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 2 місяці тому

      @LetHimRead You need to get a life. Obviously, you are very interested in my comments. Paul Anderson NEVER used roids or PEDs. In fact, PEDs were not invented when he was alive. He was born very strong. Anderson is said to have backlifted 6,270 pounds in 1957, which was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the greatest weight ever lifted by a human.

  • @Dcook85
    @Dcook85 Місяць тому +1

    This is seriously good content. I learned a lot.

  • @animal9432
    @animal9432 Рік тому +7

    Thank you sir! This is one of the best videos I've ever seen on Yahoo. Informative, based on reality, practical. I've just subscribed.

  • @dano1307
    @dano1307 Рік тому +7

    this was awesome. I never thought about the nervous system part. You made a great analogy with the governor and chimp.

  • @Seluecus1
    @Seluecus1 Рік тому +14

    i always did find it interesting that smaller frames, with more refined musculature, can move around the same weight as a big frame with bulky musculature, if not more weight without much more issue than the other.

  • @thesergio9444
    @thesergio9444 Місяць тому +2

    I KNEW DON ROEINHOUDT WELL. HE USED TO WORK OUT AT OLYMPIC COACH LARRY BARNHOTH'S GYM IN AKRON,OHIO. AT THAT TIME HE WAS NOT AS LARGE AS YOU SEE HIM IN THE PHOTO, HE WEIGHED 280 AND I REMEMBER HIM PRESSING 300. HE TOLD ME HE DID NOT PRACTICE THE PRESS A LOT. A LITTLE LATER HE MARRIED CINDY ? WHO WAS ALSO A GREAT ATHLETE. THOSE WERE THE TIMES.THROUGH LARRY I MET MANY GREAT OLYMPIC LIFTERS AND BODYBUILDERS. JOHN GRIMEK , RICK HOLBROOK,PHIL GRIPPALDI, BOB HOFFMAN, AND OTHERS. I REMEMBER I WAS ALLOWED BEHIND THE STAGE AT THE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS AND WAS THE SECOND PERSON TO CONGRATULATE ALEXEEV AFTER THE FIRST 500 LB CLEAN AND JERK. THOSE WERE THE DAYS. I WAS 18-23 THEN NOW I AM 76,

  • @darraghchapman
    @darraghchapman Рік тому +7

    Really broad, comprehensive video dealing with a lot of topics in a factual, eloquent and clearly well researched way. I have no interest in weight lifting, but I've liked the vid and will recommend a few of my friends to watch it :)

  • @alexd531
    @alexd531 Рік тому +79

    i always thought the premise was "the adrenaline reduced her muscle preservation and she lifted the corner a few inches long enough to get help." never thought it was a hidden power, always thought it was the body saying "not succeeding is not an option, full send"

    • @windhelmguard5295
      @windhelmguard5295 11 місяців тому +27

      it just removes pain and fear from the equation.
      the pain you feel when you overexert your muscles and the fear of getting hurt are what usually limits what an average human can do, you throw those things out the window and suddenly you see yourself doing things you thought impossible.

    • @yngfljm2277
      @yngfljm2277 11 місяців тому +1

      @@windhelmguard5295 you throw these things out the window and in a house fire you throw yourself out the window

    • @Xeno455
      @Xeno455 11 місяців тому

      Adrenaline forces the body to intake more oxygen, the heart to pump faster, and increases blood flow to muscle tissue while restricting it to places like the digestive tract. It does make you temporarily stronger. Because its a fight or flight survival response. Of course it doesn't turn you into the hulk. The limiter is still there. So is the fear since its literally a fear response designed to give you a boost to remove whatever threat is causing the response. But it does make you stronger for a short period.@@windhelmguard5295

  • @David-R.
    @David-R. Рік тому +12

    I only watched half of this video and my brain already hurts. In a good way! You already answered so many of my questions!! What an awesome video. This is going in my favorites.

  • @KrissValentino
    @KrissValentino 10 місяців тому +2515

    BUT WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU PUT THE SAME STEROIDS IN THE GORILA????

    • @R1sen_One
      @R1sen_One 9 місяців тому +202

      ☠️☠️☠️

    • @marshal000
      @marshal000 8 місяців тому +826

      you get a gorilla saying Yeaahh buddy!!

    • @johnsmith-i1n
      @johnsmith-i1n 8 місяців тому +314

      You get the king, the goat, yeah buddy, light weight baby, Ronnie Coleman...

    • @SeagullBBQ
      @SeagullBBQ 8 місяців тому +97

      LIGHT WEIGHT

    • @pauleccleston5006
      @pauleccleston5006 8 місяців тому +244

      A study needs to be done with the gorilla given 2g of tren with every meal 5x a day
      What can go wrong

  • @MrKevinStraub
    @MrKevinStraub Рік тому +6

    whoa, who was the guy that got crushed at 21:05 and was that even real?

  • @GergC0521
    @GergC0521 Рік тому +250

    I have always had a very thin build. 6'3" and 165 lbs back in HS. I had one of those miracle strength incidents. A friend who was on the football team asked me to spot him (bad idea since I didn't know what that meant. He was trying to press 300lbs. It ended up on his face. I stepped over him, lifted it off his face and threw it aside. Moments later after the adrenaline was gone, I couldn't lift that for the life of me. Not a car I know, but more than this skinny kid should have been able to lift.

    • @SovereignStatesman
      @SovereignStatesman Рік тому +11

      Wow, you lifted 1/20th the world record, what a miracle.

    • @MenOn13
      @MenOn13 Рік тому

      @@SovereignStatesman HE Was a non lifting kid then u illiterate

    • @Real_MisterSir
      @Real_MisterSir Рік тому +321

      @@SovereignStatesman It is relative strength, not peak strength. Your comment has no purpose other than showing your own arrogance.

    • @toastedt140
      @toastedt140 Рік тому +146

      ​@@SovereignStatesmanBad troll is bad. Go back to cave

    • @adrianaslund8605
      @adrianaslund8605 Рік тому +52

      Varangians(Vikings who ended up working as royal guards in Constantinople) were said to have something called "The Varangian war dance". In which they basically worked themselves up into a frenzy. Where they would exhibit unusual strength for a while. And afterwards. They typically needed some rest days. Basically they purposefully activated that high adrenaline state so that none of their muscles would hold back.

  • @ffor91
    @ffor91 Рік тому +4

    One of the best videos on the subject of human strength I ever seen. Thank you.

  • @Autonomy0
    @Autonomy0 Рік тому +4

    Educational, informative, and thought-provoking. Quality.

  • @eatkunedo
    @eatkunedo Рік тому +28

    There was a discovery channel show or something similar about incredible human feats a few years ago, I wish I could remember it. But some guy ended up getting crushed under a stone and sliding towards a cliff or something like that, and he lifted the stone off to free himself, which was the incredible feat because it was ginormous. It was one of those "she lifted the car" adrenaline strength stories. Anyway I'm talking about it because it completely crippled him, like both his biceps blew off, broken ribs, fractured his spine and ruptured every tendon in his body. He had to lie there crippled till someone found him. Good example of the psychological safety limit you were talking about and the consequences of being able to override it.

    • @kashutosh9132
      @kashutosh9132 Рік тому +1

      Did he recovered and lived a normal life after that??

    • @TheBigIronOnMyHip
      @TheBigIronOnMyHip Рік тому +3

      So fake because it was proven the woman never lifted the car.

    • @eatkunedo
      @eatkunedo Рік тому +3

      @@kashutosh9132 I'm not sure, someone also commented about it on the second video about lifting the car so they might know

    • @eatkunedo
      @eatkunedo Рік тому +10

      @@TheBigIronOnMyHip I'm not sure if you're trolling but it definitely wasn't fake and I was saying it as further evidence of Bromley's point about the woman never lifting the car. If you are ever able to "adrenaline" yourself beyond your normal psychological limits it would be physically catastrophic.

    • @whiteeye3453
      @whiteeye3453 Рік тому +4

      That is why brains limits strength to not hurt the self's unless in dire situation

  • @deathracoffee
    @deathracoffee Рік тому +39

    Need a warning before 21:00, this was so unexpected from a chill video like this

    • @DevMP
      @DevMP Рік тому +3

      it's a doll xD

    • @fisken6680
      @fisken6680 Рік тому +5

      @@DevMP yeah I think that wasnt his point tho?

    • @cybercryomancergaming6396
      @cybercryomancergaming6396 Рік тому +6

      Bro I'm heavily scared knowing that could happen to anyone it looked like a horror movie

    • @Ra-Hul-K
      @Ra-Hul-K 11 місяців тому +1

      @@cybercryomancergaming6396 something straight out of Final Destination 🤯

    • @Alizudo
      @Alizudo 11 місяців тому

      ​@@DevMP That's a doll?? Sure doesn't look like one

  • @wilsonrawlin8547
    @wilsonrawlin8547 Рік тому +7

    Outstanding breakdown. You covered so all the critical aspects of human strength.

    • @jemlesvideo
      @jemlesvideo Рік тому

      And people tends to underestimate human strength for basic aplications unfortunately, even wealthy young men !
      I often have to show my mechanic employee that he can lift things like a gerbox by it's own and not have to ask for help, him or others thinks it's way to heavy. People also look at me with round eyes whenever I lift something like a 60 liters (62.5 kg) barrel of motor oil from ground to my chest and walk carrying it a few meters to store it... Come on ! It's just nothing, but we live in a very " Soft people " era sadly where normal strengh gets confused with heavy duty capabilities.

  • @BetterWorse-ge6ci
    @BetterWorse-ge6ci Рік тому +154

    One thing I found EHHH was the "mom lifting a car" segment. From what I've read in the small amount of literature I have read is that it "does" happen but it only happens in so far as it allows one to go beyond the governor you previously talked about, not beyond your actual physical strength. Like you also explained, trained individuals' governors are at a much higher % of their physical max than untrained but things like adrenaline, cortisol and others do play a roll in removing that safety limit, but again neither you nor your body can escape your actual strength limits.

    • @slofty
      @slofty 9 місяців тому +7

      You can through a catastrophic tonic-clonic seizure, but I'll give that that doesn't really count as what you had in mind. It isn't rare for otherwise average people to break all kinds of stuff unleashing an ungodly amount of kinetic energy whilst seizing.

    • @al-imranadore1182
      @al-imranadore1182 9 місяців тому +4

      ​@@sloftyour bones limit us.

    • @egoalter1276
      @egoalter1276 9 місяців тому +17

      In healthy humans both musculus quardiceps and soleus are strong enough to easily tear their connective tendon from bone. The feequency of torn achilles injuries in performance sports is proof enough.
      Musculus biceps and triceps brachii not necessearly so, but they can be traind to the point they are.
      The limits exist not to let us have an anime powerup when we get scared or angry. They exist to stop us from tearing our musculature apart.

    • @al-imranadore1182
      @al-imranadore1182 9 місяців тому +1

      @@egoalter1276 If the lifting mechanism works properly our bones can support the dead weight of an average adult rhinoceros.

    • @egoalter1276
      @egoalter1276 9 місяців тому +5

      @@al-imranadore1182Bones, yes. Tendons and ligaments? No.

  • @SeanMacadelic
    @SeanMacadelic Рік тому +4

    I’m sorry but that video of the guy squatting around 21:30 give or take 10ish seconds (I really don’t want to go back and watch it again)…
    THAT is my worst nightmare. I am hesitant to use a squat rack because of that. I generally only squat with body weight or some kettle bells. It works for me, but I know I’ll never be that super strong, but I’m okay with that.

    • @okaayyyybuddy1927
      @okaayyyybuddy1927 Рік тому +4

      dont worry that video is fake and is cgi, that wouldnt happen irl

  • @sailorjerry3720
    @sailorjerry3720 Рік тому +5

    Great delivery and pacing! Interesting, informative, and engaging!
    Well done!
    Thanks!

  • @marvelousmartins2362
    @marvelousmartins2362 Рік тому +7

    I'm not a weight lifter at all, nor do I wish to be but I just want to say that you have a really good channel. I stayed tuned in and I honestly do not care at all about weight lifting.
    Good job, brother.

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +1

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

  • @reesecain.fitness
    @reesecain.fitness 3 місяці тому +1

    This content is unbelievable honestly

  • @nohandstand8
    @nohandstand8 Рік тому +7

    Incredible video! "An Architect watching a beaver build a dam" was a beautiful metaphor

  • @niru.krishna
    @niru.krishna Рік тому +26

    5:11 Bromley firing shots at destiny LMAO

    • @AlexanderBromley
      @AlexanderBromley  Рік тому +6

      Ahaha that was my editor. I didn't even see that until now

    • @AndreiIhanus
      @AndreiIhanus Рік тому +4

      Destiny? That's a girls name.

    • @Tyler-yw3rf
      @Tyler-yw3rf Рік тому +3

      ​@AlexanderBromley based editor. Though I would consider calling him the average man too generous.

  • @pseudosnark386
    @pseudosnark386 Рік тому +15

    Sage. Never wanted to bulk to where I'd need to be a powerlifter. Hover around 200 and I'm 5'11. Not a gym rat. Put up 280, and while that's not super. It meets my functional goals.
    Mad respect for the behemoths in this video. Can't imagine the discipline and motivation required to get there

  • @theperipateticaccrescent7685
    @theperipateticaccrescent7685 Рік тому +3

    Gem of a Channel ❤
    Lucky to find it!

  • @Voltanaut
    @Voltanaut Рік тому +31

    21:05 is absolutely terrifying.

    • @gitsurfer27
      @gitsurfer27 Рік тому +3

      That was the jump scare of my life XD

    • @Ticks
      @Ticks Рік тому +7

      I'm not the same anymore

    • @gitsurfer27
      @gitsurfer27 Рік тому +5

      @@Ticks I'll never trust again

    • @kozmosis3486
      @kozmosis3486 Рік тому +4

      Did that guy fkn die or wut?

    • @Ticks
      @Ticks Рік тому +3

      @kozmosis3486 I reckon he must have :/

  • @MikeMarlowe-ym3zy
    @MikeMarlowe-ym3zy Рік тому +26

    It’s funny that they accidentally made Batman pretty realistic before they knew how strong humans could be, I think I read he could bench like 500 and squat 1000, which is completely feasible, the only fantastical part is how lean he stays while doing these things

    • @marioaveiro1118
      @marioaveiro1118 Рік тому +5

      Master Wayne is blessed with exceptional genetics

    • @parisscott2496
      @parisscott2496 Рік тому +3

      Batman can bench a 1000 tho😎

    • @callak_9974
      @callak_9974 Рік тому

      Remember that Batman also is highly intelligent and basically holds like 6-8 phd levels of knowledge in a range of sciences.

  • @ClashBluelight
    @ClashBluelight Рік тому +49

    About the whole super strength during extreme stress thing. There was one time that I got really angry and ripped a nylon rope clean in half as a teenager. That rope was rated for over 500 pounds, and I tore it in front of my chest horizontally. This injured my shoulders, upper back, and hands badly enough that I couldn't use them properly for a week, but it still worked in the moment. So I think there is some validity to that whole thing. For reference, I normally couldn't rip anything close to that in that same time period. Like, my limit was closer to 100 pounds.

    • @blazestrange4499
      @blazestrange4499 Рік тому +13

      The phenomenon you experienced is called hysterical strength.

    • @ClashBluelight
      @ClashBluelight Рік тому +10

      @@blazestrange4499 I know that. I was just responding to the video's seeming rejection of the entire concept as fiction.

    • @SlaznznTryrj
      @SlaznznTryrj Рік тому +2

      Hmm really?

    • @SlaznznTryrj
      @SlaznznTryrj Рік тому

      @@bigballs274 8 inches is great

    • @elijahknox4421
      @elijahknox4421 Рік тому +7

      I was going to ask you what gender you were because apparently it's a lot more common among females but i went onto your channel to see instead and i watched your gangsta video.... and more questions were answered than i was asking

  • @WmJFaust
    @WmJFaust 9 місяців тому +1

    Pure greatness double-dipped in awesome sauce and served on a platinum platter of quality! Great information.

  • @neovssmith19
    @neovssmith19 Рік тому +36

    The Destiny cameo lol
    And 21:04 gave me a heart attack omg

    • @ezradaiquiri11311
      @ezradaiquiri11311 Рік тому +25

      I thought I was the only one in the comments about that. WAS THAT REAL?!? It looked so horrific, I couldn't even tell if it was real...

    • @SpiritOfParadox
      @SpiritOfParadox 11 місяців тому +1

      And at 5:09 😂

    • @Humpor
      @Humpor 8 місяців тому

      ua-cam.com/users/shortsqGGUhjd59Uw

  • @pixllo
    @pixllo Рік тому +4

    Didn't know this channel, I kind of watched this on a whim, thinking it would be some brute force records listing. There was indeed some of that but you went so much further and with very precise and interesting scientific approach. I thoroughly enjoyed your video and learned a ton. A gorilla thank you to you!

  • @FlyingWithSpurts
    @FlyingWithSpurts Рік тому +3

    What an amazing video on the biomechanical engineering of powerlifting!

  • @CharlesVelazquez
    @CharlesVelazquez Рік тому +7

    5:10 someone tell me the love or secret behind using a photo of destiny in this video? Lmao.

  • @metalgynoid
    @metalgynoid Рік тому +4

    Great video, man! All of this was super-informative! Thanks for making it.

  • @bakibalo
    @bakibalo Рік тому +12

    15:33 is an interesting one. Before going to highschool I was doing wrestling time to time which requires type 2 fibers. In highschool I started swimming and my endurance increased a lot. I was way active than how I was before hs. Then one day, in hs 2nd grade I tried to wrestle an old friend from wrestling days. He beat me so bad, and I was suprised that I was doing worse after an phisically active year. This video helps me understand how I lost power by doing an endurance sport.

  • @aquariussoda007
    @aquariussoda007 Рік тому +3

    One of the more interesting subjects to watch , thank you .

  • @Shannendetro
    @Shannendetro Рік тому +6

    Please tell me im not the only one who saw the SHOTS FIRED @ Destiny LOLOLOL. The clip only lasted a quarter second, but that was enough LOLOL

  • @bigolbearthejammydodger6527
    @bigolbearthejammydodger6527 Рік тому +4

    well as regards 'moving cars' me and my cousin did put my friends car between 2 trees for a laugh. But we were both young(at the time) and fit and very large men - both played rugby, me for college, him professionally for the Sheffield eagles and I was a Judo blackbelt. Id say we lifted about 700 lbs between us, it was a small car, so the idea of parents moving cars off kids etc is not a problem for me, bearing in mind that modern and particularly European cars are a LOT lighter than an Impala! Hell i've seen my (at the time) middle aged mum pick up a 300 lb man in a medical emergency - but she was trained to lift bodies due to her profession.
    Regarding the mental discipline, I can say that this is something I have researched a lot in my life - as a pro fighter psyching my self up was normal, but as some one that has delved into the spiritual and mental disciplines associated with martial arts, meditation can absolutely lead to unlocking those natural protective barriers that the body has in place to prevent damaging itself.
    As a now middle aged/older gent that is living with disability from military service ( and a lifetime of combat sports) I can also state that these same techniques I learned then enable me to get by now - to ignore pain, to force my body to move. further more that the good musculature can compensate for damaged bone and joints. I have lost track of the number of medical professionals that have told me they cant understand how I can walk at all - that I should be in a wheel chair.. but I get by walking with a stick

  • @elliottwhitticar2383
    @elliottwhitticar2383 Рік тому +14

    For a while I hired a trainer for powerlifting. He said a friend who is also an elite lifter was told by a doctor that his bone density was the same as a gorilla's. Not sure if the doctor was using hyperbole, but it would be interesting to know how much stronger human bones can get through strength training. I suppose there's some increase in diameter, as well.

    • @japanesecar1501
      @japanesecar1501 Рік тому +4

      There is indeed increase in diameter, especially with "young-like" developmental pattern/ability. The density is several times average. I remember John Broz, who was a wightlifitng trainer greatly influenced by Bulgarians, has said that his lifter Pat Mendes, a 20 yo. 10 yrs ago(ha), had his hip socket density at 6 times average, and other loaded places at around 4 times, and the rest of the skeleton at around 2.3 -.7, the least mineralized bones perhaps even lower, mybe? at the lowest, I believe.. The maximum is around 10-12 times for bone.
      Those who get hit a lot have much greater density at the impact sites. The other animals train and aren´t as fickle and in their heads as we. We still have the means to become very much like them. You can be 2 different people of very wildly different heights and looks/health, depending on how you live, and save yourself, or push against your deficiencies/weaknesses.

    • @roncaruso931
      @roncaruso931 Рік тому +1

      These guys are all on roids and PEDs. You left out Lasha Talahadze , super heavyweight OLY lifter who did a 594lb. C&J in training. He had to lift the weight off the floor, front squat it and then jerk it over head!
      Paul Anderson did a back squat of 1700 lbs. NO roids or drugs.

  • @michaelswiggart5673
    @michaelswiggart5673 3 місяці тому +18

    We have never seen a gorilla with a proper training regiment. Keep that in your noggin.

    • @pupsiuspupuliukas2394
      @pupsiuspupuliukas2394 3 місяці тому

      Gorillas are smart enough not to need one.

    • @geoffstemen3652
      @geoffstemen3652 2 місяці тому

      @@pupsiuspupuliukas2394Strong enough to be stupid enough not to need one, you mean

    • @IOomoOl
      @IOomoOl 2 місяці тому

      So Gorillas are smarter than Man?! Good 😄​@@pupsiuspupuliukas2394

    • @Faithnotworks
      @Faithnotworks 2 місяці тому +2

      This statement doesn’t makes sense considering that technically what we consider a proper training regime is just a simulation of what we would do if we didn’t evolve to live less active lives the only reason we train is because we no longer live active life styles compared to or ancestors who on average we’re stronger than us do to that fact

  • @TylerBrasfield-o7l
    @TylerBrasfield-o7l Рік тому +5

    The better we know about how our current limits work, the more easily we will be able to attempt to exceed those limits using genetic modification. I applaud your efforts sir.

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps8758 Рік тому +14

    Awesome explanations Alex, I really appreciate it. The CGI were indispensable for my comprehension. I'm grateful for the extra time you took to illustrate what was being said. Please do more such CGI for us, especially when considering those "problem joints" the knees and shoulders, and the hidden joint of the hip and Psoas function. That may help many of us progress faster through rehabilitative training. All the best to you and yours.
    New sub.

  • @parker469a
    @parker469a Рік тому +5

    5:11 The frame inserted of Des'tiny' is pretty hilarious. The guy is known for being short though he is 5'8 but he's still kinda skinny and he hunches over constantly so he looks four inches shorter.

  • @mikereinke4565
    @mikereinke4565 4 місяці тому +1

    Thanks Alex. It is genetics. Not just size and cardio, but ability to absorb nutrients, and recover, heal.
    I also liked your comment about find what you like and do it long enough. You hone it, and can be very satified with results, without competing. Screw competition. Totally vain.

  • @DarkTrapStudio
    @DarkTrapStudio Рік тому +5

    I loved this Masterclass/Course thanks a lot.

  • @JohnDoe-tv1wq
    @JohnDoe-tv1wq 11 місяців тому +5

    I’ve never paused, rewound, and said this is so interesting more times than this video. Very well done really enjoyed it.

  • @HadynWiseman
    @HadynWiseman Рік тому +3

    What a great video and editing, thoroughly enjoyed this!

    • @VAHOSS
      @VAHOSS 8 місяців тому

      👍

  • @Biend
    @Biend 9 місяців тому +1

    5:11 Destiny? My guy Destiny!? Sir, you just stole my heart. subbed

  • @germanperalta4078
    @germanperalta4078 Рік тому +3

    This is a great well done video, thank you man!

  • @jmi967
    @jmi967 Рік тому +24

    I’d like to see a second video on the limits of strength for things like jumping that take a totally different physicality (as you mentioned). And maybe a third on endurance?

    • @elijahknox4421
      @elijahknox4421 Рік тому +1

      Assuming air resistance based on the shape of your body is negligible, jumping is basically maximising the takeoff speed, and reducing the aerial deceleration. Less mass means you're able to accelerate more before takeoff, but it means less muscle to use push off the ground, so there's tradeoff there that probably be experimented with. Longer limbs mean you have more time to accelerate before takeoff as you extend your legs and you have more arms to swing upward to accelerate the average speed of your body. It mainly comes down to building strength in the arms and legs, legs because they are what push the body off the ground, arms because the stronger your arms are, the faster you can accelerate them upward which will increase your body's average takeoff speed, the heavier your arms are the more of your body you're accelerating by swinging them, but the less you're able to accelerate them so a high strength to weight ratio of the arms would be good. Ensuring your core muscles are strong enough is also good because they can keep the body stable to maximise the efficiency of the jump. Since strength to weight ratio should be high, building strength without much muscle is important (the opposite of the strength in this video) so don't eat too much and focus more on working out with high intensity but don't overdo it. Muscle is built through frequent training but you want to train your nervous system to get as much strength (hence high intensity) out of as little muscle (less frequent) as possible. It's worth experimenting what the ideal amount of muscle is for the best strength to weight ratio for jumping (theoretically it could probably be calculated but i can't be bothered to the maths right now). It's also really important to work on tendon strength (most notably the achilles tendon) because they aren't as big as muscles but due to their nature they are much more explosive than muscles (which is obviously important for increasing the acceleration before takeoff). To make tendons springier plyometrics are good and high intensity weights or calisthenics also give the tendons a good workout since your nervous system learns to draw on every aspect of strength it has in muscles or tendons. Just don't do bodybuilding designed workouts like isolating the muscle because that will leave your muscle stronger than the tendon can practically support so you could injure the tendon. I think tendon stiffness is different to tendon strength and while stiffness (improved with plyometrics) makes the tendons springier, it leaves the tendon vulnerable to injury i heard but I'm not too sure (that's worth researching), so doing tendon strengthening exercises would be helpful. To summarise, don't eat too much or follow body-building regimes, hypertrophy is mostly bad for reducing weight but there's a necessary amount to improve strength, strength to weight ratio is key (calisthenics are good for this), long limbs are good, legs are key but arm-driving and body stability is also important, improving muscle strength is important but so is tendon stiffness (plyometrics). I should say i am far from an expert in this field so this is quite high level but it should provide a good starting point using what i do know, if you had the time to read all of this.

    • @tappajaav
      @tappajaav 10 місяців тому

      @@elijahknox4421
      WALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXTWALLOFTEXT
      Formating(even just pressing enter every now and then)would make it MUCH more enjoyable to read, regardless of how much truth there is to the content

  • @purplehaze2358
    @purplehaze2358 Рік тому +20

    It always impresses me seeing people lift weights so heavy that even the bars they attach to bend under the strain of their mass.

  • @MrJpc1234
    @MrJpc1234 Рік тому +2

    8:55 Dont knock the coolness of the persistence hunting model.....the idea that a primevsl hjman could pursue prey even stronger prey until it was exhausted is pretty metal