Straight to the Bar

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HELPING YOU GET STRONGER SINCE 2004

Full Circle with the Get Up
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Chain Get-up

Adam demonstrating the Chain Get-up.

After years of heavy get ups, this is my feedback.
A few years back I submitted an article to Dragon Door in which I shared my training of Turkish Get up. This article will be considered the Part II for “Mastering the Turkish Get-up for Total Body Power“.
First, the revisions:
Mastery is a process. It is not an end goal in itself. The master is better than everyone else, yet he continues to find more, refine more, and polish more. I once thought I had mastered the Turkish get up. I now know I have many more years to learn and improve. I can now stand up with 185lbs with a 7 foot bar in one hand. Many people told me this would never happen, yet I accomplished it in under three years. Now I am eye balling 225lbs. The same people who said I would not get 185lbs are telling me 225lbs is impossible. Fools! Mastery is about improving, even when many think you do not need to improve more. I do not know where the line falls in the sand, but I know I will be the one to call it, no one else.
On variations of the Get up. There are many types of get ups, and depending on your goals some are better than others. If you want maximum strength you need to lift a lot of weight IE the Barbell version. If you want your shoulders to have some crazy strength endurance, use a Kettlebell and go for time. The recent FMS changes to Hard Style have brought in some variations of the get up by prominent RKCs such as Dr Mark Cheng such as the hip bridged get up. The classic use of a sand bag for the get up is an invaluable tool for grapplers. The point I bring to you; know the outcome you want before selecting your tool.
The Get up and the general population: There are 4 drills I personally believe every man and woman in the world should do. The Deadlift, The Get up, the KB swing, and the Goblet Squat. The Get up is the primary upper body drill in my opinion for 99% of people who are beginning a S&C program. A light weight bell such a 16kg will be all the resistance most men can handle for the first month of training. At Unbreakable Fitness it’s not an issue of “can you do 1 rep?” The issue is “can you do 1 rep perfectly 30 times non-stop?” If the answer is “no”, than you shall not even touch my heavier bells until you reach this goal.


The get up as a first class strength tool for advanced athletes: “I have trained for years now. I can military press half my body weight. Why do I need the get up?” My first thoughts-“Why not?” The focus of difficulty for the get up is a shifting beast. At first, people have to have the core strength to simply get their shoulders off the floor. Then the issue becomes shoulder strength and stability. For the overhead lunge, it may show you a weakness in the legs/hips. At the top of the rep is shoulder mobility and control. On the way down is where we spot your real control over the weight as you lay down on the floor while dominating the weight. For the advanced athlete, this gives you a variety of drills thrown together. Some people think advanced means “use a lot of drills” but remember what I said about the master-he refines and polishes. He takes away what he does not need. Mastery entails being the best while using the least amount. A master carpenter makes the fewest cuts, uses the least amount of nails, and produces the strongest, best looking house. To me a drill that does this much sounds like a tool worth hanging on to.
The end of the line, or the beginning of the journey: If you’re paying attention, the party line is to begin your KB training with the get up as the program minimum and progress to the ROP. What happens when you pass the ROP? You return full circle and begin the next trip. You can always improve with this lift. You can now do a rep with the 40kg, Great job! Now go for 5 minutes. You got 5? Now do 10 minutes. I don’t want to toot my own horn here too much, but I can lift more in this lift than most people in the world can military press. If I make it a point to strive for 20 minutes with a 48kg, then I feel it is a good addition to your program as well if your goal is to have a strong body. Trust me; I wouldn’t lead you down a wrong path.
My Thoughts on How Much and How Often: The get up does not kill the shoulders as much as volume snatches or presses. By kill I mean how much it cuts in on your recovery, not as in destroy. I have had weeks where I did Get ups daily, and I have had weeks where I did them 4 days, or 3 days. Now I usually do two days a week. One day is heavy volume; I take a 32kg or a 40kg, and work for up to 30 minutes of get ups, continuous movement. This is a workout in its self and is great when you’re pressed for time. The second day is heavy singles with a barbell working from 135 to 180. I typically do 3-5 singles. You do not need a ton of volume when the intensity is that high. The barbell requires much more focus, and a vise grip is needed to prevent it from tilting or rotating out of control.
On the Safety of the Lift: The get up is much safer than people would think. Practice the skill of dumping the weight before tackling heavier get ups. Don’t forget you have two hands either. It would be a shame to see someone get crushed because they were too stupid to use their off hand to prevent the bar from striking them. As far as injuries for doing the drill – I have not heard of any, but I know that does not mean anything. Think about it – there is no ballistic movement, there is a lot of movement, but it is all gross motor skill movement. There is not a ton to mess up when you’re working with a 12kg or 16kg bell learning it as long as you pick it up correctly and remember the golden rule – Never do anything you could not do with a 106lbs Kettlebell.
Closing Thoughts: I started the get up because a hard man wrote how they fixed his shoulders. I kept doing them because I got stronger and stronger. I will continue to do them because I know they are first class for strength. My list of strength achievements grows every month, and I will continue to attribute the gains to many years invested in this all-around power movement.

Over to you. Drop us a line on Twitter ( @scottbird ), or add a comment below.

Cheers.

 

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