Archive for celebrity training secrets
First I want you to watch this video…whether you like pro wrestling or not.
Just think for a second about how I actually relate to this guy. Is it because we both have dark hair? Nope. Is it because we both like Living Colour (the ones who wrote “cult of personality…his theme song). Not really.
It’s because we both speak our minds and try to create change. Even though it’s just a work in pro wrestling and heck it may even work if WWE listens to the fans (though considering what many fans what…cough cough..John Cena cough cough). Much like CM Punk is trying to “change the status quo” by getting on a microphone…I try to change the status quo by typing up what I am thinking about on this here blog you are reading. If you have been reading my stuff for any significant time now, then you probably have a different status quo. You are probably aware that women won’t become bulky and that men don’t need steroids to get great results.
That’s the point of all this. You see I have a bit of an eye for catching bullshit. It wasn’t always that way. I’ve bought those weird ab gadgets that you find late at night including that piece of crap that electrocutes you. I learned from those mistakes and apply it to my writings and my teachings.
When you look at the fitness industry as a whole, you can see that there needs to be change. Marketers are always looking for a hook and throw around lies and misinformation like a monkey throws it’s crap. (They both throw around crap…there’s your connection.) Things only get promoted if they are “sell-able” whether they are legit or not and this is the sort of thing I have to contend with.
Last week sometime my dad was watching TV and he was telling me about an infomercial where they take “High Intensity Intervals and flip them on their head.” Whoa, holy crap! The secret of fat loss is flipping what exercise scientists did upside down?!?! This is monumental!!!! Why didn’t I think of that?
My dad’s response, “That sure is a dishonest industry you are trying to compete with.” (note….hard work is going to be decent at getting results…that’s what causes good before and afters…not some secret interval. also DO NOT where cross trainers with my methods)
But you see what I mean by status quo? That’s actually better then most of the others I have seen. Here are some other offenders.
Not all fitness people who use kettlebells are any good….buyer beware. Also, I will go in depth on this when I get a chance but I have been to mellow to be fair to this one.
But you get what I mean right? This is the status quo you have likely been fed and you deserve better then this nonsense. This is what I am here to do for you. I need you to help me change the status quo by spreading my message to anybody and everybody who will listen. That’s it for today.
Eric Moss over and out.
What MMA star Fedor taught me, that can improve your “all around fitness”
Posted by: | CommentsNot too long ago I had the rare opportunity to sit in on a seminar with the GREAT MMA star Fedor “the last emperor” Emelienenko. If you don’t know who that is that’s ok…because not a ton of people know mixed martial arts outside of UFC but that is besides the point. First let me give you a little bit of background about him. Up until recently he was essentially undefeated in around 30 something fights which in mixed martial arts is unheard of. He had shown no weakness discernible weaknesses including winning a fight right after being dropped on his head.
Well anyways getting the chance to sit in on a Fedor seminar isn’t something that very many people get to do so I jumped at the opportunity to learn from who I consider the best in the world. I mean mixed martial arts is a sport that demands the total fitness package. And my main take away from learning from him was when he said this…and I am paraphrasing here since it’s been about a year.
если есть то, что вы не очень хорошо нужно потратить много времени там.
Translated from Russian that means “If there is something you aren’t good at you need to spend a lot of time there.” People are often times drawn to things they are good at in the gym. You’ve seen the same people flock to the bench press on Monday (in fact it’s a running joke that Monday is international bench press day) and even though the bench press is a half way decent exercise they still have a ton of gaps in their training programs.
Leave your comfort zone if you want to improve
.
As you may have seen me say in a previous blog post about getting all the components of fitness it pays to specialize…but you shouldn’t leave gaps in your training program either. Get really good at a few highly productive exercises and train the others at a low level. By low level I like to include it as sort of either a warm up or an active recovery measure. Low enough where it tells your central nervous system…”Hey don’t build us up at the expense of this other exercise.” but high enough where your central nervous system says “but don’t forget about us either.” And to follow up on Fedor’s advice.
Specialize on your weaknesses to make them equal to your strengths.
So you can either do what you have always done, or you can improve. That part is up to you.
Well that’s it for today. Thank you for reading.
Physical awesomeness to you.
Eric Moss
I am a fitness professional residing in Hopatcong, NJ, who is dedicated to making myself and my clients as strong as (or stronger than) they look and to look beyond sexy. I help my clients drop body fat quickly, gain strength quickly and I use kettlebells as my main tool and the RKC system as my main methodology. I am a personal trainer with small group personal training and fitness bootcamps in Morris and Sussex County NJ. This fitness blog is where I have become known as a straight shooter with a unique writing style and I have been known to force companies to take videos down where they teach unsafe and ineffective technique with just a couple written words. It has become an inside joke started by a guy that bends steel bars into bonsai tree shaped decorations with his hands, that I don’t wear shirts but that is mainly because I have built up my physique along the lines of a Greek statue and exhibit it proudly.
The reason low reps with heavy weight are better for “muscle toning” then high reps are.
Posted by: | Comments“Hi Eric I am calling to ask about joining your fitness bootcamp to help me prepare for my wedding.”
“Sounds great.”
“Now I know this is going to sound weird and to be honest I am a bit embarrassed by this. I work part time as a personal trainer and I know I should be lifting weights but every time I do I get bulky. I know a lot of women are afraid of getting bulky but shouldn’t be but I really do and I don’t want to look that way on my wedding day.”
“When you lift do you lift between 8 and 15 reps like a body builder to try to ‘tone’ your muscle?”
“Yes.”
“Yeah you have been bulking up because you were lifting in the sarcoplasmic hypertrophy rep ranges. You see when you train like a bodybuilder you risk putting on more meat because that’s what those rep ranges are do. What I train you for is a mixture of neurological changes and myofibrillar hypertrophy. Neurological changes don’t really effect the size of the muscle and myofibrillar hypertrophy tends to be not quite as big but much more dense then sarcoplamsic hypertrophy does.”
Hypertrophy in non geek speak means muscle growth.
“Ok I trust your judgement.”
I don’t know if that was the specifics of the conversation I had with my new client to be last summer because at the time I was driving and the place where I was had a whole lot of hills, turns and stop signs and I drive a manual transmission and didn’t have my bluetooth headset in place. At the time I was also a little bit nervous since she was a personal trainer. I was worried she might try to tell people she learned how to train with a kettlebell and become a competitor to me. I was worried she might be just like this guy.
She ended up becoming one of my favorite clients to work with.
That worry maybe lasted 5 mins tops. What I had here was a coach that wanted to learn a different way of doing things and most importantly we had a deadline. She was due to get married in 3 or 4 months (I can’t remember which) and she wanted to lose dress sizes and look great in her dress ASAP. She did a very brilliant thing by taking me on to help her out.
Why?
Because she let me do the worrying about what rep ranges she should be training in (one of the values of having a coach). The only thing she needed to do is trust me and do what I instructed. Now what the heck does this have to do with the rep ranges for bulking and toning? Well I spend a lot of time saying the same old things to women about them not having the necessary hormones for building a ton of muscle and you don’t get that way over night and very few women happen to be the genetic outliers for that and they need to lift heavy to tone up and yada yada yada. What I had here was someone that really did have that problem and needed to work around it and become the perfect example of what I have been saying all along. Well if you don’t know about the different rep ranges read on reader.
You may not always agree with the things I say and that’s ok, (my wife rarely does). I’m sure you’ll agree with me that the human body is an amazing adaptive mechanism. Whatever your stressor is your body can find a way to try to become more efficient at it. Let’s take a look at movement and what happens that can cause your body to adapt and which adaptations will occur and why.
Whenever you try to move, what happens is your brain sends a command through your nervous system to tell your muscle to contract and when that muscle contracts it pulls on a tendon which pulls on your bone and causes movement. Now as you perform this movement your body wants to become better at it so you can either move more weight, perform more reps or whatever. Your body also wants to do the easiest possible thing.
So when you lift a heavy weight for just a few reps the nueral changes which tend to come fastest (yes strength can be built over night) and even within the session (hence the use of feeler sets) are the first to take place. You see most people only are able to activate a small portion of their muscle fibers. Elite athletes can contract more of them and sometimes when you flip the crazy switch that’s when you hear about those Reader’s Digest story’s about ladies lifting cars off of their loved ones. That’s one way.
Now one definition of muscle tone is that it is a nuerological phenomena where muscle fibers are in a half contracted state however this is mostly found in the postural muscles (otherwise we would just collapse). You develop this by practicing movement while minimizing fatigue. However what most people refer to as “toning” in my opinion is a specific type of hypertrophy.
Another way for adaptation to occur is for the muscle fibers themselves to build up the sarcomeres (the myofibrils make up the sarcomeres). This is growth of actual muscle fibers. They are able to produce greater amounts of tension and takes on a dense appearance. Bodybuilders also try to develop this to give their muscles a harder appearance (because of a higher density). This is what I believe most people would mean by the term “toning”.
Then there is sarcoplasmic hypertrophy. The sarcoplasm is like a goo that lies around and between the fibers but doesn’t carry with it contractile strength (the ability to produce tension). What it does carry is energy that would be used in the absence of oxygen to be able to make the muscle contract more times. This tends to take on a “puffy” appearance (not toning) and also produces the most bulk since fluid has a higher volume then a solid. The puffy appearance is because you have essentially filled up your muscle with a liquid instead of a solid which is less dense.
The growth in structure is an adaptation to the functional demands placed on the given system, where adaptation occurs at a molecular level within the genetic structure of the cells. Supertraining Mel Siff
Ok so back to the whole your body adapting thing. Different rep ranges ask for your body to become better at certain things. Here are multiple possible outcomes.
1) Your brain figures out how to contract more muscle fibers.
2) Your muscle fiber itself needs to become stronger in order to minimize future muscle damage and develop more tension.
3) Your body knows that it is probably going to be have to able to do something repetitively and stores more fuel around the muscle fiber to be able to contract more times without getting exhausted.
4) Your body is able to contract it’s muscle fibers many times but at such a low intensity that it can use oxygen to fuel the process (aerobics).
Number 2 would be what most people are after when they say “toning”. The only way to do this would be to lift a heavy weight for a handful of reps. It lies somewhere between 3 and 6 reps with a heavy weight. If you aren’t using a heavy weight the only thing you are doing is kidding yourself.
Number 3 and 4 is what most people try to do to accomplish number 2 but as you can see it would be the opposite because of what those adaptations are actually for. I’ll be honest I have no idea where these myths originated but it has been fueled by all the unscrupulous marketers that keep this myth running strong. My client luckily trusted me and got great results.
Now even though we sometimes used higher reps as dictated in Kettlebell Burn it didn’t overload the muscle to the point of adding unneeded bulk. That fat loss program was meant to deplete some of the fuel that could end up being stored as fat.
Yeah so anyways I hope you understand why low reps with heavy weight are much better for toning muscle then high reps are by looking at what happens under the surface. I also urge you to check out how “toned” the bride that was in my NJ fitness bootcamp is. She trusted me, lifted heavy (as more women should, and looked spectacular on her wedding day. Nuff said.
I am a fitness professional residing in Hopatcong, NJ, who is dedicated to making myself and my clients as strong as (or stronger than) they look and to look beyond sexy. I help my clients drop body fat quickly, gain strength quickly and I use kettlebells as my main tool and the RKC system as my main methodology. I am a personal trainer with small group personal training and fitness bootcamps in Morris and Sussex County NJ. This fitness blog is where I have become known as a straight shooter with a unique writing style and I have been known to force companies to take videos down where they teach unsafe and ineffective technique with just a couple written words. It has become an inside joke started by a guy that bends steel bars into bonsai tree shaped decorations with his hands, that I don’t wear shirts but that is mainly because I have built up my physique along the lines of a Greek statue and exhibit it proudly.
Thor and God of Thunder workout
Posted by: | CommentsDid you check out that commercial for the upcoming Thor movie? I did and I have to say I am pumped about it.
Every now and again a movie comes along that can serve as being inspirational partially because of the physiques some of the movie stars show. Sometimes it can be the characters themselves. When I originally heard the casting call for the person they wanted to portray the God of Thunder they described him like this.
physically powerful, very handsome, occasionally egotistical, petulant, and wild” male lead in his mid-to-late twenties and standing six feet or taller in height. They want “a natural warrior with a quick charming wit who must be genuinely and severely humbled before becoming the compassionate, mature her [sic] of our film.
I missed my opportunity for the role because of my height (thanks mom.)
I want you to contrast the description they had with what most would consider a physique for Thor. I think and I could be wrong about this that most people would assume a bodybuilder would take the lead role. Instead they were looking more for a powerlifter type of physique that was mostly lean and would look like a warrior.
Why would they look for one and not the other? Muscle is muscle is muscle right? Not exactly.
When it comes to training muscle there are different types of hypertrophy (when the muscle gets bigger). The one to get bigger faster is known as sarcoplasmic hypertrophy. Sarcoplasm is a fluid in the cells that can make the muscles balloon up but don’t come with an equal amount of strength or hardness. This is the type that bodybuilders are known for though they also try to build the other kind…at least in the days of Arnold they did. (ever notice that the most successful bodybuilders were powerlifters first?)
Myofibrillar hypertrophy is an increase in muscle density and can make them grow larger though not nearly as big or as fast. It takes is harder to the touch.
Though this is all happening under the skin where you wouldn’t be likely to see it it does come out in other areas. Pavel talks about the “presence of power” which is sort of the way you carry yourself when you are aware of how strong you are. Strength brings a confidence in a way that inflating the muscles doesn’t but there is more to it then that. According to a university article I found a short while back, upper body strength can be predicted by looking at a person’s face and that it was more accurate then not. This was supposedly a way to determine fighting ability which would be sexually desirable females and would be a deterrent for males to not want to engage them in battle.
So if strength can be predicted by a person’s face with relative accuracy where else might it be able to be felt? The sports arena? The bar? The office? A party? The beach? Every where you go? Strength isn’t just seen when your shirt is off (though that doesn’t normally hurt either.) but I am going off on a tangent.

Thor is a symbol by many to be a symbol of strength. His big badass hammer is supposed to be the thing that caused thunder in the sky and only he could wield it. Using a hammer can be extremely beneficial for building wrist and grip strength which is a major portion of upper body strength. Recently I got a dvd in the mail by Jedd Johnson (who I’ll be interviewing right here on my blog pretty soon) that shows how he builds upper body strength using the sledgehammer as a tool so that he can bend steel more effectively (badass) and set even more strength records. Actually while I am on that check a picture of him out and you can tell just by his face that he has some serious strength hiding in there.

Alright so let’s build some upper body strength with a basic workout. Here will be some exercises in your arsenal. A sledgehammer, pullup bar and a kettlebell will be required.
Kettlebell snatch then press 3 reps (of your 5 rep max)
sledgehammer leveraging (singles but try to work your way down the handle)
pullups 3 reps (use additional weight to make it your 5 rep max)
repeat…a lot but don’t go to fatigue.

As for rest your breathing will be elevated somewhat after each movement. Wait until it is at about 20% before moving onto the next exercise. After about 45 mins of that call it a day. Do the same thing again later in the week but just make sure it isn’t the same in terms of total volume, density or intensity. You can change the reps too just don’t go too high there.
Have a bit of fun with this one. Practice it frequently and enjoy the confidence that comes with the power. Eric Moss over and out

So one of the major things I have to battle as a coach that trains gals is the notion that if you lift heavy you will get big. Let me say it again “It ain’t gonna happen.” Especially not with the way of lifting that I command you to do. At least not unless you are a man.
Men have about 10 times the amount of testosterone as well as testosterone receptors that women do and that is one of the hormones that speeds up the process. With that handicap you have to work 10 times as hard as I do and if you look at me I am not even all that big. Even if you have all the things that can make you big it doesn’t necessarily mean that it’ll happen.
Last May or so a girl who moonlights as a personal trainer contacted me to prepare her for her wedding day. She said and I am paraphrasing here “I know that girls are supposed to lift weights but when I do I get bulky. I am one of those few that it happens to.” I wasn’t going to argue with her because some (very few) are a genetic anomaly that has the right hormonal environment for putting on muscle and she was training like a bodybuilder. I don’t train people like bodybuilders unless that is their goal.
I explained to her that I train full body movements in non hypertrophy rep ranges to promote “strength without bulk” and that if you are in a caloric deficit then you will be unlikely to put on muscle. Even if you did put on muscle it isn’t permanent but since she is a bride we had a deadline to reach. I meet her. I take her through a swing and getup routine and she can feel an all over effect and I saw the look on her face and heard her say “Everything I know is wrong.” I told her she wasn’t wrong, it is just that what she was doing was inappropriate for her goals and I have a method that is more appropriate.
Fast forward a month or so. When I started including the one arm military press in her routine in one week she took what was a shaky one repetition max and did 4 reps with it. Think about that one second. That is a 400% increase in strength (or strength endurance the line is somewhat blurred there). How is it possible to quadruple her pressing power in that time? Do you think she put on massive muscle in order to do that? Nope.
Let’s take a look at why what women have been told about bulking up is wrong. For some reason women have it in their head that they have to train with a weight that could fit in their purse otherwise they will get big and bulky and that they have to do it in high repetitions to tone and firm up. As a matter of fact the opposite is true.
First let’s have a look at what good muscle looks like. Here is an example of someone with feminine muscle (not manly).
In the ebook the Venus Index the author tells the “untold story of fitness models and bodybuilders” and says that they are on multiple “supplements” and essentially doing bodybuilding protocols to achieve that genderless look. This is what my female clients are trying to avoid and it’s easy since we don’t put any of those factors into place. Here is the actual quote.
“When I was in the supplement industry I knew many top-level fitness models and I also knew about the
male hormones they would take to get into the extreme ‘ripped muscular’ shape they were in. In fact,
they also abused many other drugs including thyroid medication and asthma medication.”
So if you want to be big and manly go ahead and take steroids and a bunch of other crap. If you want to look sexy read on.
“So if I haven’t made myself clear enough yet, you will NOT look like a man if you lift weights.
You WILL Look like a man if you choose to take and abuse male hormones (as the top level fitness
models, bodybuilders and some top level athletes do).”
Training for strength will tone the muscle by making it more dense which gives it a harder appearance. Training heavy with weights can fill the individual fibers with myofibrils which are smaller but make them harder (think toning the muscle). Take a look at kettlebell instructor (fellow RKC) Delaine Ross. She is the perfect example of the fact that training with heavy weights won’t make you look like a man.
Ok so now that I have talked you out of the whole lifting heavy produces bulk nonsense let’s take a look at what he rep ranges do.
Low reps high weight- produces strength without bulk since you are training the nervous system here. Basically what happens is your body typically only uses about 30% of your actual muscle fibers by sending a command signal from your brain through a synapse to tell your muscle fiber to contract. You make that middleman more efficient he can command more of your existing muscle fibers and with the added benefit of not putting on bulk. That is how my client quadrupled her pressing power within a week. It also produces a kind of satisfaction amongst my female clients that trumps their fat loss. I am convinced that women secretly want to be strong and I applaud them for it.
High reps moderate weight- depending on the rep range it can produce bulky muscles because it fills up with something called sarcoplasm. I’ll admit I don’t know what the purpose of sarcoplasm is but that is what bodybuilders have in abundance.
Really high reps and pink dumbbells- This is the type of thing you see in an aerobics class. This is what you see when you go to a gym and everyone looks the same 6 months after they started. Why bother?
So to answer the question that initiated this blog post. Yes it is possible to lift weights without getting bulky. In fact getting bulky is the harder part without everything being in just the right spots and most likely with steroid abuse. Check out the Ice Chamber girls
and tell me that they are bulky. Natural strength develops beautiful bodies. Strong is the new sexy….train that way.



















