Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Best Home Workout Routines for When You Can’t Go to the Gym
Episode Date: April 27, 2020Well, here we are, quarantined because of this VIRAL BOOGALOO blitzing around the world like it’s 1941, ravaging the defenseless lungs of tens of thousands of men, women, and children. Gyms are shut...tered, Charmin Ultra Soft is now worth its weight in gold ammo, and protein bars have become a prized delicacy. The worst part for us fitness folk? HOME. WORKOUTS. Because for most of us, that means instead of our divine daily communion with the iron, we have to putz around with boring bodyweight exercises and bands. Guess what, though? Home workouts don’t have to be an unproductive slog. Although you can’t fully replicate the effectiveness of compound weightlifting, you can still gain (or at least maintain) muscle and strength with a well-designed home workout routine consisting of bodyweight exercises. And if you have some bands or dumbbells, that’s even better. So, if you want to learn how to work out at home when you can’t go to the gym, keep reading. You’ll learn the best bodyweight, band, and dumbbell exercises, and I’ll share workout routines you can start right away to stay swole through these trying times. Before we get to that, though, let’s address a question I’m sure you’ve asked yourself already. --- Time Stamps: 4:26 - Should I go back to the gym after the COVID-19 restrictions have been lifted? 15:58 - Are home workouts worth it? 26:17 - What are the best body weight exercises? 30:00 - What is the best way to use resistance bands in home workouts? 13:11 - What is the best way to use dumbbells and kettlebells in home workouts? 35:56 - What is the best home workout routine? 44:17 - What equipment should I have for home workouts? 45:37 - What are some advanced strategies for making my home workouts more effective? 48:31 - How do you use tourniquets and knee wraps properly? 50:31 - Should I incorporate sprinting to my home workout routine? --- Mentioned on The Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to another episode of Moss for Life.
I am Mike Matthews, of course, and this episode is going to be about working out from home.
Now, this is something that I spoke about several episodes ago, I think.
Yeah, it was the last Q&A that I did, I think, where I talked about working out at home and gave some advice.
working out at home and gave some advice. But as this is one of the most common questions I'm getting or common theme of questions that I'm getting via email and Instagram DMs, I figured
it would make sense to go into detail and talk about how to get the most out of your home
workouts. And so that's what I'm going to do in this episode. I'm going to talk about some of the theory of home workouts and why they to be doing and some programming tips and some
equipment recommendations. I know it's hard to get your hands on stuff right now, but I'll do my best
to recommend things that you can find maybe on Amazon, maybe on Alibaba Express, maybe elsewhere.
Things are going in and out of stock like every day right now. And I will also share some workouts and I'm going to be referring
back to an article over at legionathletics.com. If you go to the blog pinned right at the top,
you'll find a long article I wrote on home workouts. It's like nine or 10,000 words.
And I put everything I could think of in there. Body weight stuff, band stuff, dumbbell stuff,
programming tips, beginner training, intermediate training, advanced training. And so I'm not going
to go through everything in this episode that's in that article because that would be overkill
and it would not even be very useful if I'm talking about a training program, for example,
that has several workouts and then several types of progressions. So what I'm going to do is I'm talking about a training program, for example, that has several workouts and then several types of progressions.
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to generally kind of cover everything.
And then I'll be telling you to go check out that article to actually get the specifics
for the workout or learn how to do the exercises.
And honestly, if you want to skip right to the point and not listen to me talk about
working out at home, if you'd like to just get to the point and not listen to me talk about working out at home. If you'd like to just
get to the workouts and see what exercises you need to do and see what kind of equipment you
need, just head over to legionathletics.com right now. Go to the blog. Again, pinned at the top of
the blog is an article called The Best Home Workout Routines for When You Can't Go to the Gym.
Probably going to name the podcast the same thing. And it's going to have really the
meat and potatoes of what we're going to discuss here in the podcast. Now, before we get to the
show, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me
help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please consider picking up one of my best
selling health and fitness books.
I have Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women.
I have a flexible dieting cookbook called The Shredded Chef,
as well as a 100% practical hands-on blueprint for personal transformation
called The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation.
These books have sold well
over a million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can
find them on all major online retailers like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play,
as well as in select Barnes and Noble stores. So again, that's Bigger Leaner Stronger for men, Thinner Leaner
Stronger for women, The Shredded Chef, and The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation.
Oh, and I should also mention that you can get any of my audio books for free when you sign up
for an Audible account, which is the perfect way to make those little pockets of downtime, like commuting, meal prepping,
dog walking, and cleaning a bit more interesting, entertaining, and productive. And if you want to
take Audible up on that offer and get one of my audio books for free, just go to legionathletics.com
slash Audible, and it'll forward you over, and then you can sign
up for your account. All right, so quickly, let's start with talking about going back to the gym,
because depending on where you are living, soon in the next, I guess this is April 24th,
in the next several weeks, gyms are going to start opening back up. And I already know people
are going to be asking me, should I go to the gym or do you
think I should wait for a little bit?
And I don't think there's going to be any one size fits all answer for that.
I think it's going to depend on where you're at and what your personal circumstances are.
So if you're living somewhere that has not had many cases and if the numbers are very
low and let's say you're young and healthy and you are
not regularly coming into contact with people who would be considered at risk regarding COVID-19,
so that would be elderly people, that'd be people with compromised immune systems,
that would be even obese people, that has been identified as a large risk factor, then I could understand if you
wanted to get back in the gym and weren't too concerned. Because statistically speaking,
you should not be worried about landing in the hospital or dying from COVID-19 if I have just
described you. Now, I'm not saying that, sure, just go to the gym and don't worry about it. You're going to have to make your own decision. But on the other hand, if you yourself
are very overweight or older, or if you have some sort of immune system issue, or if you are
regularly coming into contact with people who are in an at-risk group, then it's probably smarter if you live in an area that has had a lot of cases
to maybe wait it out a little bit longer and see how the reopening pans out. Now, hopefully,
we don't see a major rebound. And there is data that would suggest we will not see a major
rebound. For example, a number of studies have come out over the last
several weeks that suggest that far more of the population here in the United States and abroad
have been infected than we realized. And specifically, I'm referring to studies that
have come out that have looked at infection rates in New York, in California, in Massachusetts, in Kansas, I believe, and then
abroad in Germany and France, I believe, were two other papers that I saw that, again, show that
up to maybe even 15 to 20 percent of populations of highly populated areas of the country,
which of course are going to see the
most cases, have already been infected by the virus. And that's an interesting piece of information
because if that's the case, and we'll see as the sample size grows, right, for each of these areas,
as they do more testing and the data becomes more accurate, that would mean then if that is the case, that the death rate is far lower than
we have. I wouldn't say we've been led to believe, and if maybe a little bit by the media,
and I've been very critical of how the media has been handling this since the beginning,
but you don't expect anything else from the media. They are not in the business of telling the truth.
They are not in the business of just reporting the facts. They are in the business of telling the truth. They are not in the business of just reporting the facts.
They are in the business of getting clicks and getting eyeballs and sensationalism wins. If it
bleeds, it leads, right? Anyway, so we'll see as more data comes out where we're at. And so that's
basically my answer to the questions I'm sure I'm going to be getting regarding going back to the gym.
Should I go back now? Should I wait? You're really going to have to make your own judgment call on
that based on where you live, what the situation has been like, where you live, and where you are
at in your own personal health and which demographic you fall into. And then who do you interact with?
Because remember, you could be young and healthy, and let's say you haven't had the virus yet. You go get it and you have no symptoms. You notice
nothing, your life goes on, but you're now passing it around to other people. And again,
depending on who you come in contact with regularly, you might pass it on to somebody
who gets wrecked by it. And as for people who would say to that, that we can't stay
quarantined forever because we need to develop herd immunity. We need to have enough people
get the virus and recover from it, even if they get no symptoms, but we need to have enough immune
people out there to collect up the viral material and neutralize it. And so the longer we remain in quarantine,
the longer we delay that process. And that the whole point of the quarantine was not to prevent
the virus from spreading per se, because we're never going to be able to fully prevent that.
It was to prevent it from spreading before our healthcare system could deal with the impact that it's going to have.
And as we see in the data right now, a lot of hospitals are underutilized. They're not
overflowing with patients. They have an excess of capacity. Maybe we are at that point where
we could start allowing the virus to go around without collapsing our healthcare system.
And so I suppose we'll have to see how it goes. That's my response to the counter response,
right? Is I do understand and I do agree, of course, we can't remain quarantined forever.
And how are we going to develop herd immunity if we don't go collectively expose ourselves to the
virus and start individually becoming immune to it,
start individually developing the antibodies so our immune system can recognize it and immediately eliminate it. And so that would suggest that we would actually want a lot of the young,
healthy people out in the world interacting with this virus. And you'd want the at-risk people to
stay away while we develop herd immunity. So some people
are saying, oh, well, vaccines, we don't need to do that. We just need to wait for a vaccine and
then a bunch of us can get vaccinated. Yeah, don't hold your breath. I mean, scientists are saying
12 months, 18 months. Some scientists are saying they're not so sure we'll ever have a vaccine
because of the nature of this virus. Similar to why you can't
get vaccinated for the common cold. There are just too many different strains and it's too unstable,
the virus that mutates too much. You just can't do it. And so we'll see. But something else to
keep in mind regarding vaccine development is the average time to go from ideation to deployment of a vaccine is 20 years. 20 years. And the fastest a vaccine has ever been developed
was four years, and that was the polio vaccine of the 60s or 70s. And ironically, that vaccine
had safety issues. You remember hearing about the, I believe it was about 500,000 cases of
paralysis in children in India with the polio vaccine. You should go read about
it online. There were problems. Scientists later came out and pointed out that maybe that vaccine
was rushed. Maybe there should have been more safety testing before it was rolled out. Because
one of the primary principles when you're developing a vaccine is you want to be extra careful about
safety. Because it's one thing if you have a terminal illness and you have a new experimental
drug and the doctor says, hey, we're not sure as to the safety of this. We haven't been able to do
a lot of research, but you're either going to be dead in six months or we can try this drug and
it might help. We do have some evidence here that it could help you. If you're either going to be dead in six months or we can try this drug and it might help. We do have
some evidence here that it could help you. If you're that person, of course you're going to
try it, right? And that makes sense. But in the case of vaccination, you're taking someone who's
healthy and you're putting something now into their body. So you really want to make sure that
you're not making them unhealthy. And that's why the standard for safety of vaccination is very, very high. And that's one
of the reasons why it takes a very long time to develop vaccines. So bringing this back to the
coronavirus, if by some miracle, a vaccine comes out in 12 to 18 months, I would be very curious
as to how they know this is safe. And I'd be completely open to the experts and their answer, but that
would be my initial question is, okay, before I consider getting the vaccine, I want to know it's
safe. And before I consider giving it to my kids or recommending it to my wife or to anybody,
I want to know what was done to ensure that we're not going to be harmed by this. And don't think that vaccines
can't be harmful. They absolutely can be harmful. And by the way, that's not me taking just an
anti-vaccine position, period. Not at all. That's just me taking a realistic look at the timeline,
looking at the history of vaccination and vaccines and things that have gone wrong,
as well as things that have gone right, and forming an opinion on the announcement that we're going to have a vaccine in maybe 12 to 18
months for this coronavirus. I believe Oxford University scientists, I actually just remember
this now, they're saying they might even have one ready in six months, which even boggles the mind
more in light of what I've learned about vaccines from mainstream sources,
by the way, prominent professors, virologists, not random YouTubers, real experts, people who
have developed vaccines. One guy I was listening to an interview with, he was one of the guys who
helped develop the HPV vaccine. And he was saying this. He was saying that 12 to 18 months for a coronavirus
vaccine made no sense to him. He was saying that he would have serious concerns about the safety
of it, for example. So anyway, let's try to get back on track here. And the point is that as of
right now, it would appear to me, and I'm totally fine if I'm wrong, and maybe vaccines
are going to come out quickly and they're going to be super effective and super safe. But as of
right now, based on what I've seen and what I understand, the only realistic way we are going
to get to herd immunity is getting out into the world, collecting up the viral material,
world, collecting up the viral material and eliminating it one healthy immune person at a time. One person who gets exposed to the virus, right? So you have viral material, it goes into
their body and their body just neutralizes it. And those of us who are ready to get back in the gym,
maybe we can contribute to that. And definitely if we've already had it and we have recovered from it.
I know there are some reports coming out of Korea that people who were once infected were getting
then reinfected and scientists are trying to figure out what's going on there. But that doesn't
mean that that's what's going to happen to all of us. It appears to be a fringe phenomenon that
scientists are looking into. And again, as I mentioned earlier, with the actual infection rates much higher than we've realized, who knows? We might've already had it. I might've
already had it. You might've already had it and not even realized it. We may be immune already.
We may be ready to go and do our part to help clean up the mess out there. So anyway, let's
see how it pans out. And with any luck, enough of us
have already been infected to get back out there and develop that herd immunity by the fall or
winter. So we don't see a major rebound. That would be nice. All right, let's talk about some
home workouts, shall we? So let's first talk about some theory of home workouts, why they are worthwhile, why you can
do well with home workouts. Now, putting together an effective home workout routine is just like
putting together any other kind of workout routine. It just has more constraint, right?
Because you probably don't have a barbell or a squat rack or a full selection of dumbbells or
maybe any dumbbells or any machines
or you wouldn't be listening to this podcast. And that's the kind of stuff that your normal
workouts call for, right? So instead, what do we have? Most of us, we have our body and we have
some bands maybe, and we have maybe some dumbbells or kettlebells and that's about it. And yes,
this does have its downsides. For example,
body weight exercises are not as effective as many weightlifting exercises are for gaining
muscle and strength because they're not as effective at forcing your muscles to produce
high levels of tension and progressively higher levels of tension, right? So progressive tension
overload, the primary mechanical driver of muscle growth. And the best way to achieve that, the best way to achieve
progressive tension overload or just progressive overload as it's referred to is just increase the
amount of weight that you can lift, add weight to the bar, add weight to the dumbbells, get stronger.
And this is why whole body strength and even individual muscle strength is closely
related to muscle size, general muscularity, and the size of individual muscles. Show me a dude,
for example, who can squat double his body weight for reps, and I'll show you a big set of wheels.
Now, there are outliers and exceptions, of course. We are looking at a normal distribution here,
a bell curve. What that means is the majority of people are going to be right in the middle of that curve.
That's what, 66, 67% or whatever it is. And as far as strength and size goes, the average person
is going to be strong and big. There aren't that many guys out there who are big and not strong and strong and not big.
There is good news here though, because while building up to a hundred pushups or 30 pull-ups
in one go is impressive, it's not as conducive to muscle growth as let's say working up to a
bench press at one and a half times your body weight or maybe a deadlift
for twice your reps. Not the same thing at all. But if you're brand new to resistance training,
you can do quite well with body weight exercises alone. And if you add bands, you can do even
better. You can gain muscle and strength right now. If you are new to resistance training,
if you don't have, let's say, if you're a guy and you've yet to gain your first
10 or 15 pounds of muscle, if you're a gal, you've yet to gain your first five-ish pounds,
maybe five to eight pounds of muscle, you can do well with body weight training. And again,
especially if you have bands. And if you have dumbbells, then your prospects only get better.
In fact, based on my own experience working out and working with thousands of other people and talking with researchers and athletes on my podcast, as well as my own understanding of the scientific literature, I would say that if you are an intermediate or even advanced weightlifter, you are not going to gain muscle or strength right now if all you can do is body weight training and band training. And probably the same goes for dumbbells unless you have a big heavy set of dumbbells, but you probably don't.
And so you're not going to make much gains right now, but you can probably maintain most or all of
your muscle and a lot of your strength for at least a month or two with just body weight training. And I would say
a couple of months, maybe three, four months with the right band and dumbbell workout routines,
like we're going to talk about in this podcast. And, you know, looking at research on how much
volume it takes to maintain muscle versus gain muscle. And there are a couple studies on this. And one suggests that you can
maintain your muscle on about a third of the volume that it takes to gain muscle. So let's
say you're an intermediate or advanced weightlifter and it takes 15 hard sets per major muscle per
week for you to progress. That's what you need to do. You could cut that down to five per week, five hard sets per major muscle group per week to maintain muscle.
It really does not take that much work to maintain your physique. So hell, I mean,
I haven't done this experiment personally, but I would not be surprised actually, if you could
maintain a lot of your muscle, if you could go from being intermediate
or advanced weightlifter, like pretty jacked, you could maintain a lot of that, if not most of it,
with body weight and bands. If body weight only, you're going to do quite well. You might lose some
muscle over the course of, let's say, six months, but you're still going to stay fit. You're not
going to atrophy and wither away. Certainly not. And if you have some dumbbells and if they're at
least moderately heavy, again, if you're an intermediate or advanced weightlifter, if you're not going to atrophy and wither away. Certainly not. And if you have some dumbbells and if they're at least moderately heavy, again, if you're an intermediate or advanced weightlifter,
if you're a guy, if you have dumbbells, maybe up to 60 or 70. And if you're a gal, maybe,
I don't know, 40 or so, you probably can maintain most of your muscle more or less indefinitely
with home workouts, just with a setup like that, some bands and some dumbbells. And the reason for why that is, is you have the volume point. And then you also have the point
that research shows that so long as you take your sets close to failure, both high rep sets,
so let's say sets in the range of 15 to 20 reps, as well as low rep sets. So let's say four to six
reps and everything in between causes about the same amount of muscle growth that a 20
rep set that is ended close to failure. And you're probably going to end close to technical failure
where your form starts breaking down, not absolute failure where you can't even get another rep,
unless maybe you're doing a body weight exercise and you're not risking any injury by letting your
pushup form fall apart,
for example, that if you do that, that you are sending just as strong of a muscle building
signal or you're creating just as strong of a muscle building stimulus as the heavier stuff
that you normally do in the gym. Now, I should mention that that seems to be true up to maybe
20 or 30 reps. As you go beyond that, you really start getting into the realm of just
increasing muscle endurance. I mean, there's still a muscle building stimulus, but it's not
the same. If you can't add enough resistance to an exercise or make it difficult enough to limit
yourself to 20 to 30 reps, it's usefulness for muscle building and possibly to some degree,
muscle retention goes down. So like doing a hundred reps of something to
failure, let's say you could do a hundred pushups. That's what it took you to fail in one go. That's
not going to be as effective as 20 reps of banded pushups or something more difficult in where you
fail around 20 reps, right? So what that means then is if 20 pushups brings you close to failure
or brings you to failure, it's probably going to
produce about as much stimulus for muscle growth as six reps of maybe the bench press taken close
to failure. Now, I understand that six reps of the bench press has other advantages over 20 reps of
pushups. That's certainly true, but I'm just making a point here that body weight exercises
aren't inherently way worse than barbell exercises or aren't inherently a waste of time, but they can only get you so far because it is hard to apply progressive overload to bodyweight exercises in the way that you can with barbell and dumbbell exercises.
add weight to the bench press when you're ready to make it harder. But how are you supposed to progress on an exercise like a pushup if you already can do 20, 30, 40 reps of the most
difficult variation? And we'll talk a bit about variations in this podcast. So what can you do?
Well, you can wear a weighted backpack or vest. You can just get a backpack and put stuff in it.
Some people are doing that. You can put a plate on your back. You can use bands. You can even
have someone stand on your shoulder blades or sit on your back, but eventually you do run out of options. And another downside to modifying
some body weight exercises like that is the force can be applied inconsistently. So for example,
on the pushup, if you are using a band and it's not wrapped around your shoulders in the same
spot every time, then the resistance that's produced can vary from set to set or even rep to rep. Or if a weighted
backpack slides down your back halfway through a set, then the exercise becomes easier and so on.
And so then progression on body weight exercises often boils down to just adding more reps to each
of your sets. And that's fine. It's better than nothing. However,
once you go beyond that 20 rep mark, it is just not going to move the needle as much
in terms of muscle and strength gain and possibly muscle retention. You can do more sets too. You
can add more volume, but you also do hit a point of diminishing returns with that as well. And so
what I recommend is once you can do 20 or 30 reps of a body weight
exercise, you do one of three things. You either keep doing your current workouts and you just hope
to maintain your gains instead of making progress. And you just go for more reps basically. So do as
many reps as you can then in the sets that you're doing. And hey, this is a perfectly viable option
over the next few weeks or maybe even month. Hopefully we don't have that
much more of this ahead of us, but who knows, right? Totally fine though. Don't sweat it.
If that's all you can do because you don't have bands and you are doing the most challenging
bodyweight exercises you can do, and they're still not that challenging, I understand. But
if that's not you, then doing more challenging variations is another great
option. So you can do a feet elevated pushup instead of a regular pushup. You can do pull-ups
instead of chin-ups. You can do a pistol squat instead of a bodyweight squat. And if you want
to avoid the awkwardness of the pistol squat, have it be a supported pistol squat, an assisted
pistol squat where you're holding onto something and
that takes the technique and the balance out of it and allows you to just focus on the difficulty of
squatting your body weight with one leg. And then you can also use bands and dumbbells to make your
workouts even more difficult if you have access to them. Okay, let's move on and talk about
exercises. Let's talk about body weight exercises. And the good news here is you only need to focus on a relatively short list, a handful
plus of body weight exercises to get the most that body weight training has to offer.
And you don't need much in the way of equipment.
Although a pull-up bar is nice to have if you can get your hands on
one or if you already have one, you might be able to find online a wall-mounted option.
There was a company, Titan HD, that had some wall-mounted ones as of just recently. You might
be able to find one that you can mount in a doorway, like the ProSource Fit multi-grip.
I've used that before. And if you can't get your hands on a pull-up
bar, you can also look for something that will double as a pull-up bar. So for example, in the
mechanical room in the basement of my house, there are exposed I-beams and that's where I do my
pull-ups because I don't have a pull-up bar in my little home gym, which is some Bowflex dumbbells
that go up to 90 pounds, an upright
bike and a Pilates machine that my wife uses and some bands. That's the setup I have. So I do my
pull-ups on the I-beam. I just grip the ridge at the bottom and I guess it's good grip training as
well. And it works. It's not ideal. Not having that strong grip does cut down on the amount of
pull-ups that I can do, but not by much. I'm
probably losing, I don't know, three to five reps because of the grip and it works fairly well.
Another good option for body weight training is a dip stand or a dip station. So I was able to get
a ProSource Fit dip stand. And right now I just looked at Amazon. It's temporarily out of stock.
That's on Amazon though. You can look around and any dip station will work fine. And this is a nice little piece
of equipment that allows you to train your shoulders and your chest and your triceps.
And then you can also do inverted rows on them, which of course trains your back and your biceps.
And you can do it body weight, or if you have a small child like I do, I have a two-year-old and
I have a seven-year-old. So I have the two-year-old sit on my chest, basically on my torso while I'm doing inverted rows to add whatever she weighs.
I don't know, 30 pounds or something. 20, 30 pounds. I don't know what she weighs. But
those are a few simple pieces of equipment that are going to help your body weight training.
Now, as far as exercises go, there are a fair number of good exercises, pushing exercises,
pulling leg core, even calf. Well, there's one for calf, but you can even train your calves with
just your body weight as well as some cardio, of course. And I could run through a long list here,
like a triceps bench dip and a chest dip and a knee pushup into the pushup into the feet elevated
pushup or the decline pushup into the pike pushup into the dive bomber pushup diamond pushup, into the pushup, into the feet elevated pushup or the decline pushup, into the
pike pushup, into the dive bomber pushup, diamond pushup, right? I could go through a list,
but I don't think it's gonna be very helpful to you. So instead, if you want to check out
all the exercises that I recommend you learn and you incorporate into your bodyweight training,
again, just head over to lesionathletics.com, go to the blog. Right at the top is a long article that I wrote.
It's pinned. You can't miss it. And it is going to give you all the exercises you need,
body weight, band, dumbbell, kettlebell to do great workouts. And again, it has all of the
workouts in the article that I'm going to quickly cover here. Again, I'm not going to get
into all the nitty gritty details because I don't think it's going to be very helpful to you. It'd
be much better for you to see, for example, the exercises, go see some videos on how to do these
exercises. Then on the workouts, go see how the workouts are supposed to work. That's it on the
body weight exercises. We can probably just leave it at that. Now, if you add bands, then of course, this just allows
you to make certain body weight exercises more difficult. And you can actually add a fair amount
of resistance. So when you're looking for bands, what you want to get is the powerlifting style
bands, the ones that range from about 25 to 125 pounds. And that allows you then to use the skinnier bands for your smaller and
weaker muscle groups and the thicker bands for your larger ones, like your legs for maybe the
125 pound band you might use for some squats or some lunges. And then for your arms or your
shoulders, you might use the 25 or maybe the 30 or even the 50 pound bands.
And then what you can do is you can modify certain body weight exercises with bands to
make them harder. You also can do some band only exercises that you can't do without them,
like a band horizontal row or a band upright row, even a band deadlift. You can do that.
And again, head over to legionathletics.com, go to the blog,
check out the home workout article, and you will find all of my band recommendations as well as videos on how to do them properly. So now let's talk about dumbbells and kettlebells. So when you
don't have access to barbells, this is the next best thing, dumbbells and kettlebells. With
dumbbells now you have a lot of exercise options.
You have a lot more than you do with body weight and band training. And you also, of course,
now have a new and more effective way to add weight to the exercises and to progressively
overload your muscles. Now, if you don't currently have a set of dumbbells, you probably are not
going to be able to find one out there right now, unfortunately. I have Bowflex Select Tech
dumbbells. They go up to 90 pounds and I am hashtag thankful that I have them. I didn't use
them really at all before COVID-19. I can remember doing a couple workouts in the past on the
weekend, just doing some shoulders or some arms with them. That's about it. They pretty much have
just sat in my little home gym area,
neglected, but now they are precious. Now they are worth their weight in gold. Every other day,
I have people DMing me on Instagram asking how much for the dumbbells? No amount of money.
You can't have them. But anyway, if you can get your hands on a set of Select Tech dumbbells from Bowflex, and if you can get it at a price that you're willing to pay, then I do recommend them. I'll say that they're a little bit awkward and the
handles dig into your hands quite a bit, especially when the weights are heavier,
but who cares, right? That said, another great option is PowerBlock. That's another company
and they make, I believe it's elite dumbbells, what they call them. And those go up to 100 pounds or so.
And those are also quite popular.
And many people report liking them more than the Bowflex because they're more comfortable,
less awkward to handle.
And then the knurling in the Bowflex handles is the problem.
That's what really digs into your hand.
My brother-in-law complains about it.
He was complaining at first.
Now he stopped complaining.
I really don't care.
I think my hands are tougher than his.
He wears workout gloves.
So I think that's all we need to know, right?
Anyway, if you can get your hands on some power blocks,
I'm sure that you will like them
just as much as the Bowflex dumbbells that I'm using,
but they're gonna be hard to find.
And if you do find some,
they're probably gonna be expensive.
Now, as far as exercises go, if you do have dumbbells or kettlebells, kettlebells are a
reasonable replacement for some dumbbell exercises. I mean, I even like kettlebells more for some
exercises. So for example, doing walking lunges with kettlebells is more comfortable and more
stable than with dumbbells, at least for me and many other people.
And then there are exercises where I prefer dumbbells. I prefer dumbbells on a dumbbell bench press, for example. But if you have kettlebells, you still can do a lot of dumbbell
exercises. You're just going to be doing them with your kettlebells. And in some cases,
it might feel a bit awkward, but hey, you can still get the job done.
And so for the list of exercises that I recommend,
and it's broken down into pushing, pulling, leg, arm, shoulder, core, a lot of exercises,
a lot of options, head over to legionathletics.com, hit the blog, and then check out the article on
home workouts. And you'll find around the middle or so, all of the dumbbell and kettlebell workouts.
around the middle or so, all of the dumbbell and kettlebell workouts.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
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All right, now let's talk about routines. And I'm just going to speak broadly and just generally
here. And then I'm going to refer you to the website again for specifics on daily workouts and weekly routines and so forth.
So as far as body weight routines go, I like to keep things simple. I prefer an upper lower split
where you're training your upper body muscles in one workout and your lower body muscles,
another workout. And I prefer four to six workouts per week when I'm doing body weight stuff. And so a simple template that I use for upper body workouts is a push exercise,
three sets of it, a push exercise, three sets of it. So two push exercises, then two pull exercises,
three sets of each. So we have six sets of pushing and then six sets of pulling and then some core
work. And then as far as lower body training goes, body weight, doing eight sets of leg exercises split into two leg exercises. So
I'm doing exercise number one, four sets, leg exercise number two, four sets, and then some
core training and some calf training. Yes, I still do train my calves just on principle at this point,
because if I stop training my small calves, then they win.
And in the article over at legionathletics.com, over at the blog, I give three different body
weight exercise routines that you can choose from, a beginner routine, intermediate routine,
and an advanced routine. And so to give you a quick preview of what these routines look like,
so for example, here is some beginner bodyweight workouts.
So you have an upper body workout here, which is a knee pushup, three sets and reps of 10 to 20,
resting a couple minutes in between each set. You have a triceps bench dip, three sets,
same 10 to 20 reps is what you'd be shooting for, resting about a minute. You have a negative chin
up, which is a great way to get strong enough to do chin-ups
and then to get strong enough to do pull-ups. Again, you're shooting for 10 to 20 reps,
resting two minutes in between sets. Inverted row, three sets, 10 to 20 reps, one minute in
between each set. And then bodyweight plank, three sets, which you just do to failure,
resting two minutes in between each set. And so then there is a corresponding lower body workout,
again, for beginners. And you can do some cardio too. I talk about that as we move on to the intermediate body
weight workouts, just so you can see how things progress. Here's the intermediate upper body.
So we start with a feet elevated pushup, three sets, 10 to 20 reps, two minutes of rest. So
that's a bit harder now. And then you do some pushups after. So you're starting with your
most difficult exercise, and then you're moving to the pushups, which are less difficult. 10 to 20 reps is what you're shooting for, and a couple minutes rest
in between each set. Then you have some chin-ups, three sets, 10 to 20 reps, two minutes of rest,
and then you have an inverted row, three sets, 10 to 20 reps, one minute of rest, and some body
weight sit-ups, three sets, 10 to 20 reps, one minute of rest in between each. And again, there
is a lower body workout as well, an intermediate workout, and then some cardio that's even more difficult. And then here's an advanced body weight workout. You have a diamond
pushup now, three sets, 10 to 20 reps, resting two minutes in between sets. Then you do a feet
elevated pushup, three sets, 10 to 20 reps, two minutes. Then you're doing pull-up again, three
sets, 10 to 20 reps, two minutes, chin up, same deal on sets, reps, and rest. And then hanging
leg raise, same deal on sets, reps, and rest. And then hanging leg raise, same deal on
sets, reps, and rest. So you can see how the workouts progress and they get more difficult.
Now you are probably wondering how these workouts work. Like how many days a week are you supposed
to be training? And I had mentioned four to six is what I recommend. And as far as muscle and
strength gain or muscle maintenance and strength maintenance goes,
four is your worst option. Now you can do fine with it, but five is going to be better than four
and six is going to be better than five, right? So for example, you might, if you're doing four
days, go Monday and Tuesday, that's upper lower. And then on Wednesday, maybe you rest, do some
cardio. And then on Thursday you go upper Friday lower, and then you're resting or doing cardio
on the weekend. And if you were training five days per week and you wanted to emphasize your lower body,
you might go Monday upper, Tuesday lower, Wednesday upper, Thursday lower, Friday lower,
right? So you have three lower body workouts, two upper body workouts, and then you could do some
cardio on the weekend or you could rest. And if you wanted to emphasize upper body, then you would
do three upper body workouts. So you change that Friday workout to an upper body instead of a lower body. And then if you're doing six days,
you can set things up however you want. You can have them be balanced or you could emphasize
lower body or upper body. Now, as far as how close to failure you should be going in your sets and
as far as the rest goes, and then the 10 to 20 reps point and what you should do.
If you can get 20 reps for all sets of an exercise, like how do you progress and what should
you be doing with your cardio exactly and why for all those details. Again, I think it's best if you
just go to legionathletics.com, hit the blog and read the article. I could walk you through it all
here, but it might just get a little bit confusing. And so now we move on
to band workouts, which are very similar with band workouts. I like to do a lot of the same exercises,
but I'm just adding resistance using the bands. And I'm still following an upper-lower split with
band workouts, four to six workouts per week, not much changes. We're just using bands to make
things harder and working in some band exercises specifically in the place of body weight exercises. And for all the specifics, head over to
legionathletics.com blog, check out the article. Now, as far as dumbbells go, this is where things
change a bit because you now have a lot more options and you can get in some pretty difficult
workouts actually if you have heavy dumbbells. So I have heavy-ish dumbbells. They go up to 90
pounds. And because of how awkward they are, they actually feel heavier than what they say on the
weights. And I've gotten in some decent workouts. My legs have been pretty sore, for example. And
yeah, I'm working in a higher rep range. In some cases, I'm getting up to maybe 15 reps, 12 to 15
reps per set. But again, remember that's effective training.
That is not ineffective. That is not a small or negligible stimulus, training stimulus. That's
pretty good. So if you do have some dumbbells and if they're moderately heavy, you can get in a good
workout. And if they're heavy, you can get in a very good workout. And as far as routines or splits
go, you have options, right? I have been
playing around with different things. So I've played around with just a body split where I'm
doing a press day basically, and then a pull day and then a shoulders day and then a legs day and
then an arms day. And I've done some upper lower split, which is similar to what we talked about
with the body weight workouts, just using dumbbells instead.
So on one upper body workout, I'll do some pushing and some pulling. On another, I'll do some arms
and some shoulders. And then for my lower body training, I'm just doing a decent amount of volume
in one lower body workout per week. Normally, I'd be doing two lower body workouts if I were in the
gym. I'll be doing some heavy leg centric work on one
day, some heavy squats and lunges and so forth. And then I would be doing some heavy deadlifting
on another day. I like to separate those out. I'm not doing any deadlifting right now because
you can dumbbell deadlift, but it's just not very effective in my case because my deadlift is fairly
strong. I'd have to pull up my training spreadsheet to see
where my 1RM was at before the coronavirus world tour kicked off. But I think my 1RM was low 400s
or so. And so, okay, that's where I'm at. And I was doing sets of 385 for probably four to six.
And now I have 90 pound dumbbells and I'm just not even bothering basically. I'd rather just do a bit extra dumbbell front squatting basically. So my lower body workout again is I'm doing one per
week and I'm doing 12 sets in that workout currently, which is a little bit above probably
optimal if we're looking at muscle and strength gain, but I'm not really concerned with that.
I'm just looking to maintain and I've done a good job maintaining. I can't see any muscle loss. If you have some dumbbells, it is really not hard.
And again, if you want workouts and if you want programming, then head over to legionathletics.com,
hit the blog, check out the article, and just go down to the dumbbell workouts. You'll find
beginner, intermediate, advanced. And now as far as equipment goes, I've mentioned some equipment,
Now, as far as equipment goes, I've mentioned some equipment, dumbbells, kettlebells, a dip belt can be useful, a dip stand or dip station, a pull-up bar slash chin-up bar,
a weighted vest is also a good option.
For cardio, my go-to is an exercise bike, just an upright exercise bike.
I like that it's no impact.
You can adjust the resistance to get a pretty good burn in your quads, which may actually
contribute to muscle gain in your legs, by the way. That's been shown in research. And it's simple. I
just take my phone and I read while I do my cardio in the morning. Now, instead of driving, I'm doing
cardio, so I can't complain. And you have options for bikes. You can go with budget. You can go with
mid-tier. You can go with high quality, top tier, if you don't mind
spending the money. I have a cheap, it was like maybe $200 or something, $250 cheap bike from a
company called Sunny Health, S-U-N-N-Y Health. And if you want to see some specific recommendations
for all of this equipment that I'm talking about, Again, check out the article at Legion. I have links to everything. Some stuff is in stock, some is not. And beyond that, you
have jump rope can be good for cardio if you like doing it. A treadmill, of course, can be good.
And some other things that, again, you'll find in the article. Now, let's talk about some advanced
strategies for making your home workouts more effective. And specifically,
I have two little known ways to increase muscle and strength gain, or at least to amplify the
training stimulus and to burn more calories when you're working out at home. So one is blood flow
restriction training, and the other is cycling sprints. So let's talk about these. Blood flow
restriction training is a great way to maximize
muscle growth or at least the muscle building response. Maybe you're not going to be able to
gain any muscle right now because you're like me and you're at the end of your genetic rope anyway
for how big and strong you can get, but you're still trying to get the most training stimulus
out of your workouts, right? And so blood flow restriction is a great way to do that with lighter weights, which is pretty cool. And as the name suggests, it involves constricting the blood flow
to a muscle group when you're training. And then what happens is the blood remains in your muscles
for longer than normal. And that then positively influences muscle growth and strength in several
ways. And if you want to get into the details of how that works, head over to legionathletics.com
and search for blood flow restriction, and you'll find an article I wrote on it. I may have recorded
a podcast specifically on that as well, probably did. So you might also find a podcast if you
search my feed, or if you just check out the article, if there is a podcast, it will be
embedded in the article. So you can just listen to it if you'd rather do it that way.
Now, the main benefit of blood flow restriction training is that it allows you to get a good
training stimulus while using weights that are like 20 to 40% of your one rep max, which is
pretty cool because those are the kind of weights you might be stuck with when you're doing home
workouts, right? So what that means then is if you can squat 315, let's say that's your training weight,
and now you're stuck doing goblet squats with like 45 or 50 pound dumbbells, you can actually
get a decent workout in if you use BFR with the dumbbells, with the goblet squats. And you can
use BFR for your arms and your legs, but unfortunately you can't do it for your chest,
back, core, or glutes. It's really just for your limbs. And all you need to do it is something to wrap your arms and legs with. And I recommend
medical tourniquets. And there's a product that is in this article over at legionathletics.com.
Zaptec's buckle tourniquet is the one that I recommend. But if it's not in stock and you can't
get it, or if the delivery time is all messed up, just find something like it. These are for the most part, probably just interchangeable. They
all just come from China, China. And so long as they're not broken, they'll work. And you're also
going to want some knee wraps for your legs. So the medical tourniquets work for your arms. Then
you want knee wraps for your legs, like the
Ritfit knee wraps, for example, if you can get them on Amazon. If not, you can find something
else that will work. Now, as far as how to use the tourniquets and the knee wraps properly,
if you're wrapping your arms, you want to have the band tucked into your armpit. And if you're
wrapping your legs, they should be nudged up against your crotch. Now, in terms of tightness, you should be going for like a nine out of 10
for the arms and maybe a seven out of 10 for the legs. The key here is making sure you have enough
pressure to trap blood in the muscles, but not so much that blood can't even enter the muscles
because that would cause problems. And again, if you're going to do BFR, I do recommend you check out
the article that I wrote and the podcast. I do think there's a podcast and you could skip straight
to the technique section if you don't need to hear anything else about why you want to do it
and how it works. But if you just want to know exactly how to do it, just head over to
legionathletics.com, search for blood flow restriction, because I talk about some common mistakes that people make. And one of them is tightening the tourniquets
until they hurt, which then completely cuts off blood flow. And you don't want to do that.
You just want enough pressure to restrict the flow of the blood from your muscles back to your heart,
but not so much that the blood can't even make its way into your muscles in the first place.
And I also talk about the mistake of going too heavy on the weights, for example,
into your muscles in the first place. And I also talk about the mistake of going too heavy on the weights, for example, and only using BFR instead of heavier weight training, if you can do heavier
weight training. And so that's about it for BFR. I guess one of the things that's worth mentioning
is if you are going to use BFR, then what you can do is you can follow the workout programs that
I've discussed briefly here and that you'll find
in detail over at legionathletics.com over on the blog in the home workout article. What you want
to do then if you're going to incorporate BFR is instead of moving up to the next hardest workout
routine, when you get 20 reps, when you hit your rep targets, you move up when you get 40 reps
because BFR training makes high reps more effective. So again, it allows you to get more
mileage out of your home workouts if you incorporate BFR. All right, now let's talk
about sprinting, cycle sprinting in particular. Running sprints outside is, it's good cardio,
it's good high intensity cardio, but it's going to beat your legs up. You can forget about doing
any serious lower body training if you're going to be sprinting outside. I've tried it in the past and I couldn't make it work. Even two or three sprint
sessions per week was enough to just kill my squat and deadlift progress. And so we're talking
about cycle sprinting here. And of course you need an exercise bike, but if you do have one,
you can actually kill two birds with one stone here. You can do cardio and you can do leg training.
So believe it or not, research shows that cycling sprints can produce similar gains in muscle size
and strength as resistance training. Now, of course, this is in the legs and multiple studies
have shown that adding cycling to a resistance training program can enhance leg muscle growth.
Now it's worth mentioning that high
intensity cycling sprints tend to be the most effective in this regard. You can't expect much
if you're hopping on the bike and barely breaking a sweat. You know, you have to work hard on the
bike if you want it to really impact your muscle gain in your legs. However, another nice side
effect, another nice benefit of high intensity cycling sprints is they also burn a lot of calories. They burn more calories in less time than steady state cardio, for example, which is a nice bonus while we're in recommend. So first you hop on the bike and you do 10 minutes of easy spinning. This is a warmup. You should be able to easily talk in
full sentences. And then once you're warmed up, you sprint as hard as you can for 30 seconds
with enough resistance. So you can barely finish before needing to take a break. Yes,
this should be tough. And you want to be able to pedal quickly. The idea is not to grind against too much resistance.
You should be pedaling quickly, but it should be enough that you're not spinning out and
you are pressing against notable resistance.
And again, by the end of 30 seconds, you are about gassed.
So then you do four minutes of easy spinning.
That's your reduced resistance four minutes.
You're not pushing yourself. That's your recovery. And then you repeat the second and third steps
three more times. So you do a total of four rounds of 30 second all out sprints with four minutes of
rest in between each. And you're beginning with the 10 minute warmup. And as your fitness improves,
you can increase the number of times that you repeat the sequence of
sprinting and cooling down. Now, I don't recommend doing more than 10 rounds though in one workout.
If you can do it, I'm very impressed, but I don't recommend going beyond that as your performance
is really going to start to decline sharply after that. And as far as when to do your cardio,
you can cycle immediately after a resistance training
workout. You could do it later in the day, or you could do your cardio on days that you don't do any
resistance training. I would not recommend, however, that you do your sprinting or really
any cardio before your resistance training though, whether it's body weight band or dumbbell slash
kettlebell, because it is going to sap quite a bit of your energy. And if you're doing sprints, it's going to sap a lot of your energy. All right. Well, we've covered a lot and that's
more or less everything I wanted to share with you on home workouts. So remember that while
body weight band and dumbbell kettlebell workouts can never fully replicate what we're used to in
the gym, can never fully replicate the effectiveness of heavy barbell lifting with the right exercises though, with the right routine and the right attitude, right? Don't let perfect
be the enemy of good and all that. We can definitely maintain, and some of us may even
be able to gain strength and muscle right now with the approach that I've shared with you in
this podcast. The main limitation, of course, to these
types of workouts is progression. There is a point where we need more resistance. We need the exercise
to be more difficult and we just can't get there, but that's okay. We can try different types of
exercise variations. We can work into higher rep ranges, you know, even 20 to 30 reps per set. We
can do more volume up to a certain point, maybe more than we would normally do in our regular weightlifting workouts. And if you want to give everything I've talked about here
a whirl, again, head over legionathletics.com, hit the blog, check out the article pinned at the top
on home workouts, and you'll find everything that I've discussed with you here, plus all the workouts
laid out in easy tabular form for you to
start with. You can just bookmark the article and go back to it for each workout. And we are just
wrapping up workout logs too. They're going to be available as Google Sheets and Excel Spreadsheets,
and they have all the workouts in them, and they allow you to track your workouts. So you can just
open up the Google Sheet or the Excel Spreadsheet. It'll tell you what to do, and you'll be able to put in
what did you do, and then come back to it for your next workout and next workout and so forth.
And those will be available over at legionathletics.com blog, home workout article pinned
at the top. Somewhere up toward the top of the article, we'll put a clear call to action for
downloading the workout logs, as well as probably some other things that we'll put a clear call to action for downloading the workout logs,
as well as probably some other things that we'll put in the package. So if you want to skip
everything, if you want to skip the lines and just get straight to the ride, then that'll be
the easiest way to do it. All right. Well, that's it for today's episode. I hope you found it
interesting and helpful. And if you did, and you don't mind doing me a favor,
could you please leave a quick review
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Because those reviews not only convince people
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