Would you mind sharing how you schedule your strength, endurance and martial arts workouts throughout the week?
Seems you would train a lot of speed into the "snap" of your kicks and punches if you are accustomed to explosive concentric (positive) power lifts followed by slower eccentric (negative) returns.
About the "neuro/mental' thing: You are right that so much of response is due to neuromuscular conditioning or mind/body coordination. Kurz talks about that a lot, so I do coordination exercises like those arm circles in every direction and balancing exercises, footwork and dance in my warmups. ( No, I do not dance at the dojang. Wouldn't that get wierd looks! Only at home. Try kata in tempo to music, but don't dance.)
Cindy
Knee pain when doing side splits
Another good workout. I think giving the sartorious muscle a bit of attention has been the missing link for me.
Managed to do 2 mins of ISO stretching in box split (6x5sec bursts then 1x30sec burst x 2 sets) at 150 degrees, then 3 mins of relaxed box stretch at 145 degree with very little pain in the inside of the knees. That's without doubt the best I've acheived since I started martial arts.
Thanks Cindy for the info.
Managed to do 2 mins of ISO stretching in box split (6x5sec bursts then 1x30sec burst x 2 sets) at 150 degrees, then 3 mins of relaxed box stretch at 145 degree with very little pain in the inside of the knees. That's without doubt the best I've acheived since I started martial arts.
Thanks Cindy for the info.
Sunday (in order)
3 min warmup on X trainer
2 sets of 10 Leg Swings (front/side/back)
2 sets of 3 mins speed ball platform
2 sets of 3 mins double-ended bag (mostly whippy kicks kicks)
2 sets of 3 mins heavy bag (jump kicks, back kick etc)
2 supersets of: 20 squat thrusts, 20 step lunges, 20 lateral bounds with a medicine ball in hand
4 sets of 10 plyometric pressups
20 normal pressups
2 sets of shoulder circuit 30 secs of each of the following with 1kg wrist weights:
-straight punches
-overhead punches
-bentover lateral raise
-upright lateral raise
-overhead press
-hold arms out straight to the front
1 set of 75 decline situps
1 set of 15 weighted swiss ball crunches
ISO & relaxed stretches
Mon
Early Morning Run (30 mins) before breakfast
Evening: TKD for 1 hour technical workout
Tue
Weights - Chest, Biceps & Triceps
Wed
Same as Monday
Thur
Weights - Back & Legs
Fri
Early Morning Run - No TKD
Sat - REST & CHILLOUT
I do dynamic stretches every morning 2 x 10 reps each and every night
In the evening these are followed by relaxed stretches 2 mins each stretch.
ISO stretches are done on Thursdays after weigths for the legs and on Sundays after the crazy workout.
3 min warmup on X trainer
2 sets of 10 Leg Swings (front/side/back)
2 sets of 3 mins speed ball platform
2 sets of 3 mins double-ended bag (mostly whippy kicks kicks)
2 sets of 3 mins heavy bag (jump kicks, back kick etc)
2 supersets of: 20 squat thrusts, 20 step lunges, 20 lateral bounds with a medicine ball in hand
4 sets of 10 plyometric pressups
20 normal pressups
2 sets of shoulder circuit 30 secs of each of the following with 1kg wrist weights:
-straight punches
-overhead punches
-bentover lateral raise
-upright lateral raise
-overhead press
-hold arms out straight to the front
1 set of 75 decline situps
1 set of 15 weighted swiss ball crunches
ISO & relaxed stretches
Mon
Early Morning Run (30 mins) before breakfast
Evening: TKD for 1 hour technical workout
Tue
Weights - Chest, Biceps & Triceps
Wed
Same as Monday
Thur
Weights - Back & Legs
Fri
Early Morning Run - No TKD
Sat - REST & CHILLOUT
I do dynamic stretches every morning 2 x 10 reps each and every night
In the evening these are followed by relaxed stretches 2 mins each stretch.
ISO stretches are done on Thursdays after weigths for the legs and on Sundays after the crazy workout.
Re:
This is a very nice shoulder routine. I can see it starts with the posterior deltoid, the medial deltoid, a compound movement for the entire shoulder girdle (even if overhead pressing sometimes favours the front a little too much sometimes due to form) and finally the last hits the anterior portion of the deltoid. That's probably one I avoid having heard of its predominance during overhead and bench pressing.ash_leto wrote:bentover lateral raise
-upright lateral raise
-overhead press
-hold arms out straight to the front
I am particularly interested in the lateral raise for the medial deltoid as this is the area which most increases the width of the upper body in an aesthetic fashion, and is the fibre which while it acts as a synergist to the actions of the anterior/posterior during pressing/pulling movements, is not emphasized.
The shoulder abductors, just as the hip abductors (such as the medial glutes), add mass in area which do not interfere with movement because they are on the outside of the body. They also add to the effect of the hourglass figure. They are small muscles, but one it is very easy to become vain about =)
I remember in one of the videos... not sure exactly where, but I think I remember seeing Mr. Kurz doing some lateral raises with dumbbells. Except that unlike many people he did not halt at holding the arms parallel, but did a full sweeping range of motion until the dumbbells were overhead, it was like the anatomy chart or the Vitruvian Man or something... I forget the specific word, something Leonardo drew possibly.
Many neglect the other portion of that, something about "well it's mostly traps" which I've never bought. I just think there is more than the traps at play there. It seems to me that using this full range of motion would be of greater benefit to overall mobility, especially when considering contribution to moves such as the military press and in training the medial deltoid to contribute to it.
Since I normally don't do it that way, it felt strenuous to lift that high even with bare arms or 5lb dumbbells in spite of being able to lift far heavier weights to parallel. I think this demonstrates the importance of contracting the muscles this much and going completely overhead.
It is wonderful how the shoulder rotates. When you lift in a straight line you begin with the palms facing your hips at the bottom, yet they face away from each other at the top. From the perception of lifting laterally the arms don't seem to rotate at all, yet if you lifted overhead going in a line to the front, they have changed 180 degrees through some combination of forearm pronation and internal shoulder rotation.
Alternatively, I suppose one could begin the lift with the palms facing away from the hips and ending facing together. The same thing seems to happen though, I wonder if you have to internally rotate to lift above shoulder level or if I'm getting mixed up... some word like 'circumduction' comes to mind.
I like when doing transverse abduction (rear lateral raise for post delts) to have the elbows facing up. Then tension in the triceps is required to keep the elbows extended, it's like the top of a triceps kickback, a nice pump.