Hey everybody! Been a loooooong time. It's nice to find that my account still exists.
When I first came here and made the paradigm-shifting gains I made, I was 19 and a freshman in college. Now I'm 24 and working full-time.
Looking back, my motivations surrounding working out were very different than they are now. I was very intimidated by Berkeley's social environment, and I fell back on weight training to give me structure and what I hoped would be a self-esteem boost from my new body. Ironically, as I got bigger and my body more beautiful, my self-esteem did not improve. Quite the contrary, I started to focus on perceived imperfections in my musculature. Instead of this sexy, muscular dude, I was just a gym rat who looked at himself in the mirror all day.
It has been three years (!!) since I've lifted. That's NOT to say I haven't worked out in the mean time. Since I stopped posting I've gotten certified as a Personal Trainer (NASM), experimented with advanced cardio routines, and gotten really into yoga and flexibility.
I used to be all about weights weights weights, size size size. Snarfing down so much food that I felt sick all the time, busting room-clearing farts during lecture. Now I approach it as, I want to feel good, feel capable, and appreciate my body for the temple that it is.
Weights are now 15% of my routine. Here's what I currently do:
-cardio - 20% Mad max program (google "mad max cardio"
-Yoga - 30% - basic classes at my gym. I LOVE yoga. It shows you where you're at in overall body harmony.
-Flexibility/Postural wellness - 20% Rope-stretching and foam rolling to keep me limber
-Weights - 15% - HST all the way.
-Steam Room/Cold shower 15% - Alternate steam room for 10 minutes, cold shower 1 minute. I do 3 reps, it makes you feel great and does wonders for recovery.
In accordance with HST principles and my own experience, here is what I would consider to be my advanced routine.
Squat x2
SLDL x1
DB Press x2
Cable pulldowns x2
Cable rows x2
DB OHP x1
That's it. Isolation gives me nothing. I grow the same without it, and it just fatigues me and hurts my strength on the lifts that really matter. I'm growing like a weed with protein and creatine, and I can do all of it in 20 minutes with supersets.
Weight progression: VERY unstructured relative to the vanilla. I just pick a starting weight that's very low, and increment it every other workout. I'll start doing 15 reps and drop it to 10 when I can't complete the 15 anymore. Eventually I hit 5's, and then I milk it for strength gains. During SD, I'm never sitting on my ***. Quite on the contrary, I have more time for yoga and the steam room (mmm).
Anyway, I won't be posting very much. I'm super busy, and it's all been rehashed 15000 times anyway. I wanted to let you guys know, I'm still alive and trucking. I want to sing HST's praises. Not only is it by far the most effective routine I've used, but I've adapted it into a super-fast, super-compressed routine that facilitates my overall fitness program.
I would encourage you guys to branch out and try new things.
-YOGA. If you're only weight training, you're messing up your body. Period. Go do yoga, and you'll realize how bad it's gotten.
-Core Performance by Mark Verstegen. It changed my workout paradigm forever, and taught me how to use cutting-edge tools like ropes, foam rollers, and physioballs to improve often-neglected areas like flexiblity, balance, and tissue pliability.
This is also by far the best and most supportive BBing online community I've been a part of.
As parting words, I would encourage you to examine your underlying motivations for lifting. What do you hope to accomplish? What drives you? Imagine that you've reached your goals. How do you feel? For me, for a very long time, weight training was a good thing done for bad reasons. I'm young -- I paid no consequences for some questionable lifts I did. But if you're older and have joint issues, or prior injuries, it's easy to pay a physical price for lifting heavily and frequently. HST is so effective, so refreshing, that it's easy to get carried away and get addicted to the gains. I urge you, keep it in perspective, listen to your body, and know yourself.
Rock on bros.
When I first came here and made the paradigm-shifting gains I made, I was 19 and a freshman in college. Now I'm 24 and working full-time.
Looking back, my motivations surrounding working out were very different than they are now. I was very intimidated by Berkeley's social environment, and I fell back on weight training to give me structure and what I hoped would be a self-esteem boost from my new body. Ironically, as I got bigger and my body more beautiful, my self-esteem did not improve. Quite the contrary, I started to focus on perceived imperfections in my musculature. Instead of this sexy, muscular dude, I was just a gym rat who looked at himself in the mirror all day.
It has been three years (!!) since I've lifted. That's NOT to say I haven't worked out in the mean time. Since I stopped posting I've gotten certified as a Personal Trainer (NASM), experimented with advanced cardio routines, and gotten really into yoga and flexibility.
I used to be all about weights weights weights, size size size. Snarfing down so much food that I felt sick all the time, busting room-clearing farts during lecture. Now I approach it as, I want to feel good, feel capable, and appreciate my body for the temple that it is.
Weights are now 15% of my routine. Here's what I currently do:
-cardio - 20% Mad max program (google "mad max cardio"

-Yoga - 30% - basic classes at my gym. I LOVE yoga. It shows you where you're at in overall body harmony.
-Flexibility/Postural wellness - 20% Rope-stretching and foam rolling to keep me limber
-Weights - 15% - HST all the way.
-Steam Room/Cold shower 15% - Alternate steam room for 10 minutes, cold shower 1 minute. I do 3 reps, it makes you feel great and does wonders for recovery.
In accordance with HST principles and my own experience, here is what I would consider to be my advanced routine.
Squat x2
SLDL x1
DB Press x2
Cable pulldowns x2
Cable rows x2
DB OHP x1
That's it. Isolation gives me nothing. I grow the same without it, and it just fatigues me and hurts my strength on the lifts that really matter. I'm growing like a weed with protein and creatine, and I can do all of it in 20 minutes with supersets.
Weight progression: VERY unstructured relative to the vanilla. I just pick a starting weight that's very low, and increment it every other workout. I'll start doing 15 reps and drop it to 10 when I can't complete the 15 anymore. Eventually I hit 5's, and then I milk it for strength gains. During SD, I'm never sitting on my ***. Quite on the contrary, I have more time for yoga and the steam room (mmm).
Anyway, I won't be posting very much. I'm super busy, and it's all been rehashed 15000 times anyway. I wanted to let you guys know, I'm still alive and trucking. I want to sing HST's praises. Not only is it by far the most effective routine I've used, but I've adapted it into a super-fast, super-compressed routine that facilitates my overall fitness program.
I would encourage you guys to branch out and try new things.
-YOGA. If you're only weight training, you're messing up your body. Period. Go do yoga, and you'll realize how bad it's gotten.
-Core Performance by Mark Verstegen. It changed my workout paradigm forever, and taught me how to use cutting-edge tools like ropes, foam rollers, and physioballs to improve often-neglected areas like flexiblity, balance, and tissue pliability.
This is also by far the best and most supportive BBing online community I've been a part of.
As parting words, I would encourage you to examine your underlying motivations for lifting. What do you hope to accomplish? What drives you? Imagine that you've reached your goals. How do you feel? For me, for a very long time, weight training was a good thing done for bad reasons. I'm young -- I paid no consequences for some questionable lifts I did. But if you're older and have joint issues, or prior injuries, it's easy to pay a physical price for lifting heavily and frequently. HST is so effective, so refreshing, that it's easy to get carried away and get addicted to the gains. I urge you, keep it in perspective, listen to your body, and know yourself.
Rock on bros.