In a worst case scenario, would you be physically and mentally ready to fight to save yourself or someone else? What qualities would you need to survive? Here's what you'd need:
Has your training successfully delivered on the above qualities? If not, you may need to drastically change your methods. You need a program designed for what I call barbell savagery.
Barbell savagery is simple, and it begins with strength.
Pick two lifts that you want to be great at and train them every time you step in the weight room. The intensity of these lifts will be relatively low, around a 6 or 7 on the 1-10 rate of perceived exertion scale (RPE). With these lifts you'll learn tension, build skill, and improve proprioception.
Those lifts are followed with two more big barbell lifts that are loaded more intensely. On upper-body days you'll press and row. On lower-body days you'll squat and deadlift.
All of these lifts, main or assistance, are loaded at an intensity of 8 RPE. The volume is low as building devastating strength levels doesn't require outrageous volume. Instead, it requires focused and intense volume. Maximal force production requires loads at or above 80 percent, so we're loading these lifts up.
The key with these lifts is picking the ones that work for you. Squatting jacks me up so I don't do it, but I do two different deadlift variations per week. Find what works for you, do it hard, and do it often.
Whether it's to train a stronger deadlift, punch a guy's neck sideways, or hit the tight-end so hard his dog dies, we develop power to smash. Like strength, power is simple. Choose the right tools, with the right loads, and then demonstrate violence.
The list of tools isn't expansive: Olympic lifts, jumps, sprints, throws. Pick the ones that work well for you and do them with speed and intent. Intent, though, is the master. Demonstrations of power begin with a conscious decision. In that instance you're the baddest man on the planet and nothing can stop you.
If you can't Olympic lift, do loaded jumps. If sprinting is out of the question, jump. I don't know of anyone who can't throw. My favorite combo is an Olympic lift from the hang and a med-ball throw. For nasty power, this is my go-to.
As humans there are certain movement competencies we should all meet. We should all be able to roll, skip, and crawl. The toughest competency of all, though, is holding still.
There are thousands of specific joint mobilizations and stretches you could learn, but instead we'll use iso-extreme holds to improve mobility and stability (more on this later). This way we'll build competency with basic human movements. Do each with consistency and you'll move and feel better than you ever have in your adult life.
Conditioning makes killers. I've talked at length with rugby players and mixed martial artists about conditioning – two groups of athletes that play sports that require sustained output and work through pain – and they all say the best way to win is to be in better shape than your opponent. If you're sucking wind and thinking about the burn in your legs you won't be inflicting damage.
It's helpful to think of conditioning as intensity built upon work capacity. Your aerobic capacity allows you to recover between bouts of intensity. Some bouts, of course, last longer than others. For sporting athletes, conditioning is specific to their task. The modern savage, however, needs general conditioning.
Strength and power training aid in developing intensity, but certain conditioning is necessary to bridge the gap between the energy systems. We'll build that bridge with high-intensity anaerobic finishers.
Moving well with strength is an injury prevention protocol unto itself. Making recovery a priority, however, is paramount. Improve soft-tissue quality with good nutrition, self myofascial strategies, and plenty of water. Fill your bathtub with ice and cold water a few times per week and take a dip for ten minutes.
Injuries limit training potential. Doing the little things to prevent them is worth the extra time.
If you've never been exposed to iso-extreme holds you're about to be baptized by muscular fire. They burn, bad. Fifteen seconds into a set and you'll start questioning your whole world.
I'm offering a template, not a complete prescription, because I have no idea what you need to display barbarity. What I'll offer is a comprisal of the qualities that develop a savage. It's up to you to determine what you need. Here are a few simple screens to help your decisions.
It might be that you need to develop all these qualities or just a couple. If you're still confused about where to start, improve your mobility and get stronger. Development of all qualities remains in your program; the proportions change dependent on needs.
Note: I'm not saying you need to run miles at a time or improve your mile time, but every self-respecting man should be able to run a mile without having to take a breather.
Here's a warm-up you can do before every training session, regardless of what qualities you're developing. It's mobility and movement competency condensed into a hard 10 minutes.
Exercise | Sets | Reps |
---|---|---|
Iso-Lunge Hold | 1 | 1 min./leg |
Turkish Get Up | 1 | 2/side |
Kettlebell/Dumbbell Swing | 1 | 10 |
Bear Crawl | 1 | 20 yd. |
Ankle Rocks (ankle mobility) | 1 | 8/leg |
Iso-Push-Up Hold | 1 | 1 min. |
Vertical Jump | 1 | 6 |
Weighted Cossack Squat | 1 | 5/leg |
Power Skip | 2 | 5/leg |
Side Shuffle | 2 | 10 yd./side |
Wideouts | 2 | 5 sec. |
If you've never seen an iso-lunge or iso-push-up hold before, here's what they look like:
Exercise | Sets | Reps | RPE | Rest | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | Iso-Push-Up Hold | 1 | 5 min. | ||
Hold up to 5 min. pausing for no more than three breaths. Rest until recovered. | |||||
B1 | Hang Olympic Lift or Loaded Jump | 3-5 | 3-5 | 1 min. | |
B2 | Med-Ball Throw or Upper-Body Plyo | 3-5 | 3-5 | 1 min. | |
C1 | Deadlift or Squat | 3-5 | 3-5 | 6-7 | 1 min. |
C2 | Bench Press or Overhead Press | 3-5 | 3-5 | 6-7 | 1 min. |
D1 | Bench Press or Overhead Press | 3-5 | 3-5 | 8 | |
D2 | Bear Crawl variation | 3-5 | 10-20 yd. | 2-3 min. | |
E | Row | 3-5 | 5-8 | 7-8 | 1 min. |
F | Finisher (finisher options below) |
Exercise | Sets | Reps | RPE | Rest | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | Iso-Lunge Hold | 1 | 5 min. | ||
Hold up to 5 min. pausing for no more than three breaths. Rest until recovered. | |||||
B1 | Hang Olympic Lift or Loaded Jump | 3-5 | 3-5 | 1 min. | |
B2 | Med-Ball Throw or Upper-Body Plyo | 3-5 | 3-5 | 1 min. | |
C1 | Deadlift or Squat | 3-5 | 3-5 | 6-7 | 1 min. |
C2 | Bench Press or Overhead Press | 3-5 | 3-5 | 6-7 | 1 min. |
D1 | Squat or Deadlift | 3-5 | 3-5 | 8 | |
D2 | Bear Crawl variation | 3-5 | 10-20 yd. | 2-3 min. | |
E | Squat or Deadlift | 3-5 | 5-8 | 7-8 | 1 min. |
F | Finisher (finisher options below) |
Choose activities that you like for this. You can push a Prowler or your car. You can do bodyweight exercise circuits or play with kettlebells. Ride your bike if you want to. All that matters is you keep your heart rate between sixty and seventy-five percent of max beats per minute for 30-45 minutes.
If your work capacity sucks – i.e., any seemingly low-intensity activity shoots your heart rate above 120 – then do a few sessions per week. Just need maintenance? Hit one or two sessions per week on off days. If you so choose, you can trade work capacity training in for a finisher.
Finishers are about intensity. Now is the time to imagine that you're in a fight to the death. With intensity in mind, the possibilities for constructing an effective finisher are vast.
Each set should have you working for 15 seconds up to 1 minute. Rest depends on your fitness level and goals, but you'll do well to rest for as long, or twice as long, as the time the set took you. Examples:
These aren't new, but are you doing them? Think of them as the flurry of punches that finishes a fight in the second round. You can do them for time or reps. Here's a solid example:
For this complex, choose a weight that you can easily overhead press 10 times.
Dumbbell complexes follow the same vein as barbell complexes, but because they're unilateral they require twice the volume. They don't require the same intensity as a barbell complex, but the volume increase adds a little nasty to the flavor. It also makes them great for sustaining output. Think to yourself, "My initial assault didn't go as planned, now I have to keep pounding." Keep the intensity up; don't slow down. Example:
For this complex, choose a dumbbell that you can easily overhead press 10 times.
Use your bodyweight and move with speed and power. The key is intensity. Every movement is done as forcefully, and as quickly, as possible. Example:
The key with movement medleys is to not let your movement go to hell just because you're going fast and you're tired. Go as fast as you can while moving well.
Here's the simplest finisher of all – the iso-lunge. Hold it for 5 minutes, with intermittent breaks, and you'll learn a lot about yourself and elicit a huge metabolic cost in the process.
The best exercises and configurations in the world aren't worth squat if you do them half-assed. It's the intent that makes a savage.
That intent is focus – deciding that you want to be more than some dork that pushes pencils and keeps up with reality TV. That intent is a relentless assault on the mediocrity most men embrace. While the training is physical, what it produces is internal. Savagery is a mindset.
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