Getting into shape.

Dontrike

Registered
Well Done !
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
4,009
Reaction score
79
Points
0
Light exercise done for today. During the lunges my legs were not exactly cooperating with me, quite stiff for some reason.


  • Dumbbell Bicep Curl
    • 30 lb x 16 reps
    • 30 lb x 16 reps
    • 30 lb x 16 reps
  • Arnold Dumbbell Press
    • 30 lb x 16 reps
    • 30 lb x 16 reps
  • Dumbbell Lunges
    • 30 lb x 16 reps
  • Yard Work
    • 00:25:00
 

Toadstool

Senior Member
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 1, 2011
Messages
7,024
Reaction score
418
Points
0
Well here's the thing, pullups and chinups are hugely targeting back and biceps and back shoulders. The front should is pretty much negligible. It be like touting squats a good arm workout because youre holding onto the bar .. Pullups are a pulling movement and pushups are a pushing movement. Pushups mainly work THE FRONT shoulders and the chest and triceps ... It's pretty common knowledge. Pulling movements are mostly back shoulder, back, and bi and pushing are the opposite muscles ... tricep, chest, and front shoulders ... I promise you.

It's not true that the front part of your body is pretty much negligible when doing the pull up. The abdominals need to contract to stabilize the hips, the pecs will contract to help stabilize the shoulders and lend support to the back.
You can build and sculpt a very greek-god-like, powerful upper body with those two movements.

The whole shoulder will be worked. The whole back will be worked. The chest and the entire waist and even your glutes will be worked .... IF you do them with proper form.
"But TOADSTOOL! It's a pulling/pushing motion how can your butt POSSIBLY be involved????"
Well the glutes will help stabilize the lower back. Like I said, proper form will involve a practice in full-body tension. If you stabilize your spine before you begin the motion, it will involve contraction of the glutes.

I see a LOT of people in the gym doing planks and pushups and they let their hips sag. I have yet to see one person do a pull up with proper form in the gym I go to.

Pullups pretty much work the exact opposite muscles that pushups work. Triceps/chest/anterior delts are used to push things and upper/middle back muscles and biceps are used to pull things ... Hence the reason many people have "push/pull" routines where they do all pushing movements on one day and pulling movements on another. So a PULLup and a PUSHup do not work the same muscles lol.

The push/pull routines often involve isolation movements. The push up and the pull up are compound movements. They work most of the same musculature, just at different planes.

Although, the bicep will be more activated in the pull up than in the pushup. The back will be involved in both, as will the abdominals, as will the triceps and shoulders. The pectoral muscles will be activated in both, but moreso in the pushing motions. You're right about that.

It is probably odd, but I am not a fan of spending the time to continuously change out weights, makes me feel like I am not doing anything.

Not doing anything? Even if you increase the poundage by 5, you will be improving. There is no such thing as "maintenance" in the world of athletics. You're either growing, or you're dying.
MovingUp is totally right in what he said about that.
Your body will adapt to the specific weight and movements that you do, will improve its economy of motion and you'll stop building lean tissue and will be expending less energy to do the same movement.

You have to up the bar. If you're at a plateau with the weight available to you, might I suggest changing to an entirely calisthenic routine? You can download an assortment of how-tos online absolutely free.
An increase in weight will come from progression of exercises. Look into convict conditioning for more info on that.
 
Last edited:

aBone2pick

Senior Member, Member of the Month July 2014
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 29, 2012
Messages
1,416
Reaction score
105
Points
0
Location
The Wild West
I agree that pullups are an amazing exercise, and they are my personal favorite of all time, but saying they engage your glutes is a pretty big exaggeration. That's like saying reading is going to help me add bulk to my neck because it's stabilizing my head. That being said, they are an awesome workout.
 

TheGreatDivider

Senior Member, Member of the Month Dec 2015
Well Done !
Joined
Dec 20, 2013
Messages
5,281
Reaction score
106
Points
83
^^What Toadstool said.

I did 100 pullups this week from Monday to Friday in sets of 3, not including my workout on Monday. No real reason other than to make my pullups easier and to break up the boredom.

Everything TS said I can agree with 100%. You use your abs, chest, shoulders, and a ton of other muscles in a proper military style pullup without any kipping or cheating.
 

lowpang

Registered
Well Done !
Joined
Apr 17, 2014
Messages
352
Reaction score
6
Points
0
Location
AZ
I understand stabilizer muscles, and I love pull up's, but i've never thought that glutes were involved, I'm still not sure they are. I just did a one hand pull up, so I could feel my but cheek with the other, and I didn't fell any glute activation, but doing a one hand pull-up, and a two handed pull-up are different, so maybe.
 
Last edited:

DemandPerfection1995

Banned
Banned
Joined
Feb 21, 2012
Messages
135
Reaction score
10
Points
0
Location
Tallahassee
Didn't read much of this, but I saw and immediately had to say, if you didn't already know...confuse your muscles with all sorts of different workouts targeting that same muscle, I have not gained any more muscle in this 4 months, could be super ripped over this 4 years that I did not know that muscle confusion was an factor. All this sh*t is new to me... 0_o
 

aBone2pick

Senior Member, Member of the Month July 2014
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 29, 2012
Messages
1,416
Reaction score
105
Points
0
Location
The Wild West
Didn't read much of this, but I saw and immediately had to say, if you didn't already know...confuse your muscles with all sorts of different workouts targeting that same muscle, I have not gained any more muscle in this 4 months, could be super ripped over this 4 years that I did not know that muscle confusion was an factor. All this sh*t is new to me... 0_o

My muscles are so confused that I'm growing glutes on my arms and abs on my ass.
 

Toadstool

Senior Member
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 1, 2011
Messages
7,024
Reaction score
418
Points
0
I understand stabilizer muscles, and I love pull up's, but i've never thought that glutes were involved, I'm still not sure they are. I just did a one hand pull up, so I could feel my but cheek with the other, and I didn't fell any glute activation, but doing a one hand pull-up, and a two handed pull-up are different, so maybe.
Wow, cudos to you if you can pull yourself up with one arm.

keep in mind that the sensations in your body don't necessarily indicate anything you think it does. A sore muscle doesn't mean it was targeted more than others. "feeling" a muscle being worked doesn't really mean it's being worked harder in that movement than in another.
In unilateral movements, there is so much tension and pressure being generated, I'm not surprised you didn't feel something tense. Next time you do your 1-armed pull up, make a conscious effort to flex your butt cheeks and notice any difference in your performance. You may find that it is noticeably easier.


It's just like when I do my 1-armed, 1-legged pushup. It's working the whole body - the WHOLE body, even the calves. It's not a "really intense chest workout."
My butt, the whole of my core, the whole of my leg, all of my shoulders, and my fingers are all tensing to perform that movement.
 
Last edited:

Toadstool

Senior Member
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 1, 2011
Messages
7,024
Reaction score
418
Points
0
I agree that pullups are an amazing exercise, and they are my personal favorite of all time, but saying they engage your glutes is a pretty big exaggeration. That's like saying reading is going to help me add bulk to my neck because it's stabilizing my head. That being said, they are an awesome workout.

We're talking about two different things. Muscular hypertrophy and tension aren't the same thing. If you want to add muscle mass, you have to exhaust the muscle of its energy so that it overcompensates and builds more muscle (and thus more energy) for the future.
The activation I'm talking about will tone the ass, sure. Not as well as the squat can, but tension is being generated, thus strength is being used. That, AND it's working in conjunction with other muscles, thereby teaching your body to work as one unit.
That's a marked difference from isolation exercises. The combined work adds to greater strength.

It's just like when I do my 1-armed, 1-legged pushup. It's working the whole body - the WHOLE body, even the calves. It's not a "really intense chest workout."
My butt, the whole of my core, the whole of my leg, all of my shoulders, and my fingers are all tensing to perform that movement.
 
Last edited:

DemandPerfection1995

Banned
Banned
Joined
Feb 21, 2012
Messages
135
Reaction score
10
Points
0
Location
Tallahassee
Good sh*t....... i bet you're sore after every workout bro.
 

Toadstool

Senior Member
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 1, 2011
Messages
7,024
Reaction score
418
Points
0

DemandPerfection1995

Banned
Banned
Joined
Feb 21, 2012
Messages
135
Reaction score
10
Points
0
Location
Tallahassee
Lol..Both if you're switching it up... I'm just amazed is all bro... my chest used to not get sore b4 2 weeks ago <_<.
 

Toadstool

Senior Member
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 1, 2011
Messages
7,024
Reaction score
418
Points
0
Dontrike, I'm sorry for highjacking your thread. Let's get :focus:
 

aBone2pick

Senior Member, Member of the Month July 2014
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 29, 2012
Messages
1,416
Reaction score
105
Points
0
Location
The Wild West
This is a fairly pointless argument, so I'm gonna throw in the towel. I think our pullup discussion has become too anal.

:cool:
 

MovingUp

Registered
Well Done !
Joined
Nov 10, 2012
Messages
972
Reaction score
48
Points
48
Location
Texas
Toadstool I will grant the chest being a relatively worked muscle group in a pullup set however come on lets be honest here, the work you do on these other muscles besides the back/side shoulder and back on pullups is not going to be effective in any sense of the word in building muscle or gaining strength in these other groups of muscle.

I come at you as an enormous pullup fan. I work my back almost solely with pullups and chinups variations. I am doing sets of added 60 -80 pound pullups at the moment and just 3 days ago got a skinny 135 pound gym friend to hop on my back and did a few chinups for fun.

Trust me I know I used some abs and butt to stabilize myself with that much weight but beyond going that heavy will I really work my abs effectively enough to call it a "good substitute" for working these muscles? If not what's the point of even mentioning how they are working the muscles slightly? Are pullups really a good substitute for working the muscles pushups does? That is what mslookin4more was implying back on page 64 and it's just false. Surely you can not think that pullups are good for triceps chest and front delt come on man it's not like this isnt common knowledge in the fitness community!
 

Toadstool

Senior Member
Well Done !
Joined
Jul 1, 2011
Messages
7,024
Reaction score
418
Points
0
Toadstool I will grant the chest being a relatively worked muscle group in a pullup set however come on lets be honest here, the work you do on these other muscles besides the back/side shoulder and back on pullups is not going to be effective in any sense of the word in building muscle or gaining strength in these other groups of muscle.

I come at you as an enormous pullup fan. I work my back almost solely with pullups and chinups variations. I am doing sets of added 60 -80 pound pullups at the moment and just 3 days ago got a skinny 135 pound gym friend to hop on my back and did a few chinups for fun.

Trust me I know I used some abs and butt to stabilize myself with that much weight but beyond going that heavy will I really work my abs effectively enough to call it a "good substitute" for working these muscles? If not what's the point of even mentioning how they are working the muscles slightly? Are pullups really a good substitute for working the muscles pushups does? That is what mslookin4more was implying back on page 64 and it's just false. Surely you can not think that pullups are good for triceps chest and front delt come on man it's not like this isnt common knowledge in the fitness community!

Oh, I got the impression she was saying "do push ups until you drop some weight, then incorporate the pull ups." Pull ups at this point for The Don are not realistic. Pushups are! That's what I thought she was saying. I would agree with you in saying that one could be substituted for the other. They can't.

I could be wrong in saying that the pull up works the whole of the shoulder. I'm raising my hand over my head right now and the front of my shoulder and pec tense up. If I had a client, would I leave it at that? Certainly not. I'm just not confident in saying that the front part of the body is "negligible." I'd say it's pretty substantial. It teaches these other muscles to act as a stabilizer, tensing when their antagonists tense, and not in a way that impedes motion. I think that's very important.
would I remove other ab exercises in favour of pull ups and push ups? You know what - it depends on what you consider an "ab day." A lot of the people in the gym do like 20 different ab exercises in the same setting. I used to be that way myself. Now, I have a better understanding of how muscles work.
No, I wouldn't cut out every single ab exercise. I'd have a choice 1 or 2, possibly 3, depending on the client's skill, but I wouldn't dedicate a whole lot of time to "tackling the muscle from different angles." It's a waste of time.
Strength is gotten through high intensity. You can teach the abs to do it's job of stabilizing the spine through full range of motion in the movements like the pushup and the pull up. However, the tension built there is not increasing with each subsequent pull/push up day, so I would also throw in maybe an ab roller or leg raise or janda sit up, or dragon flies, to teach the abs to do the same job in high tension.
No i wouldn't substitute ab workout for the pull/push up, but yes I do believe absolutely they are worked effectively in these movements. If you're letting weights hang off your legs or your waist, then they work all the harder.

These are the reasons that I mention it at all.

As for the triceps, my answer will be the same. Look, if all you're doing is pull ups and never upping the intensity, then the work your arm can do will be limited. I'm here cranking out uneven pull ups and am training for the 1-armed pull up. The triceps HAVE to work. There is not enough stability in the smaller biceps for the eccentric contraction. The tricep works very hard on the more advanced progressions of the pull up. The basic pull up - I'm not so sure. I'd say it'd be limited. At DT's level of fitness, they'd be substantial. Again, would that be the ONLY thing I'd have his triceps doing? Of course not. Life is dynamic. His workout regime should be too. That being said, I'd toss out the tricep kickbacks ALTOGETHER

Just to give you an idea - I can't perform my average amount of reps if I do pull ups and push ups in the same day. My arms are exhausted. If the pull up was just the back muscles, and the push up was just the front muscles, that wouldn't happen at all. I have to time them separately.
 
Last edited:

Dontrike

Registered
Well Done !
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
4,009
Reaction score
79
Points
0
Today's workout over with. Seemed like anything dealing with my arms went slower, but after that nothing spectacular happened.


  • Barbell Squat
    • 114 lb x 11 reps
    • 114 lb x 6 reps
  • Barbell Deadlift
    • 114 lb x 11 reps
    • 114 lb x 6 reps
  • Weighted Crunch
    • 45 lb x 15 reps
  • Barbell Bench Press
    • 114 lb x 16 reps
    • 114 lb x 11 reps
    • 114 lb x 6 reps
  • Barbell Curl
    • 114 lb x 5 reps
  • Push-Up
    • 15 reps
 

Dontrike

Registered
Well Done !
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
4,009
Reaction score
79
Points
0
Workout done for today. I'm at the point where I am really pushing myself, especially with the bench presses. The farmer's walk was uncomfortable, but I bet that is from me not doing it the last two weeks because of the weather and the last time I did it I wasn't this far into my routine.


  • Barbell Curl
    • 114 lb x 5 reps
  • Barbell Bench Press

    • 114 lb x 17 reps
    • 114 lb x 12 reps
    • 114 lb x 7 reps
  • Barbell Squat
    • 114 lb x 12 reps
    • 114 lb x 7 reps
  • Push-Up
    • 16 reps
  • Weighted Crunch
    • 45 lb x 16 reps
  • Barbell Deadlift
    • 114 lb x 12 reps
    • 114 lb x 7 reps
  • Farmer's Walk
    • 499 ft | 67 lb
    • 499 ft | 67 lb
    • 499 ft | 67 lb
    • 499 ft | 67 lb
    • 499 ft | 67 lb
    • 145 ft | 67 lb