I have to admit that the circuit in the video below has been adapted over the last few years to serve as a warm-up for me before my higher work capacity/short bout training sessions.
I use it for two reasons:
It gets my brain and eyes focused on what’s about to happen (hand to hand exchange helps this).
Physically, I warm-up every muscle in my body in one shot (after foam rolling/static/dynamic stretch)
In the video below, I am using my trusty 20kgkettlebell, that’s 44lbs for all of the Americans reading this.
This is my warm-up bell, my hand to hand swing bell, and my long cycle snatch bell.
Initially, when I started kettlebell training it was all I could handle weight-wise. That’s my indirect advice to you to start slow, and progressing at an your intelligent pace. Don’t “Hail Mary” your training or you may find yourself in the emergency room.
All in good time.
Enjoy the music…
The details:
5 reps of all movements (keep it simple!).
All movement patterns must be addressed (with exception of upper extremity pulling).
Don’t put the kettlebell down until the circuit is complete.
A couple tips…
Tip #1: Use a dry erase board to map out what movements you’ve programmed and what order you want to perform them. This helps a lot. Double clutching a 44lb kettlebell rarely has a positive end result.
Tip #2: Treadmills and ellipticals are $2,000 coat racks. Sell your old useless fitness equipment and go buy some Lifeline kettlebells or PowerBlocks.
Have fun, tell me how it goes…
Coming soon: Why single kettlebell/dumbbell training is where it’s at…
I apologize for the organization of the end of this post. I had to bullet each paragraph to separate it from the the previous paragraph. A glitch in WordPress I believe. I don’t know… Sorry about that…
Ok, where I left off…
Well, maybe nothing. Most of you will never push yourself to the point where your brain or body begins to tell you to, “fuck off”. It’s not a knock against you, it’s just a reality.
Two years ago I dove head first into the SSST (Secret Service Snatch Test), which is a kettlebell challenge not for the weak of heart. The SSST is comprised of:
24 kg (53lb) kettlebell
Perform as many snatches as possible in a 10 minute timeframe.
Simple and insane.
If you are a competitive minded person, this is something to shoot for. I got about 190 snatches into the SSST and my brain flooded with “just quit this shit” thoughts. I fought them off for another 1:30min or so, then tapped out. I destroyed my old snatch record, but still, the thoughts came and engulfed me.
It’s easy to succumb to your thoughts during physical activity.
Next time you are on a run or bike, pay attention to how many times you start thinking about how nice it would be to be finished already, or how you could just walk for a bit, or no one is looking so you can dog it for a minute or two, blah blah blah. I am human, I have these thoughts, so I know that you do too.
I think what the average person struggles with the most with is their thoughts. Just one negative thought that slips passed your “will-power filter” in your brain and will infect your entire body during a workout, or ever before you ever strap on your shoes pre-workout. Negative thoughts are infectious. Once you start thinking about quitting on a task, for most people, it’s ALL OVER.
Think about it. I know that everyone has had those thoughts during a long run, during a personal training session or even back in high school or college as an athlete.
When your brain quits, you quit.
Controlling your thoughts will build you a body, I firmly believe this.
Crazy.
***Go do something great today that your body will thank you for in the future.***
Kettlebell complex workouts accomplish a lot (strength, muscle endurance, work capacity, afterburn training effect, etc) considering the time investment (15 minutes or less).
I’ve got an extensive background using complexes on training days where time is tight and when I want to lean out quickly.
Complex training is not a miracle, but for me and many others, they do pack a MASSIVE punch.
Essentially for 90 days, I used the same catalog of exercise, weight, reps, sets and rest periods to observe the adapations and see what would happe.
Calorie intake (and the quality of those calories, protein intake, etc) remained as consistent as possible.
To be fair, there was probably some slight variance with calorie intake over the 90 days, but it was controlled and kept as consisent day-to-day as possible.
Complex workouts, particularly using kettlebells, are my go-to modality for quick and powerful combination of resistance training and conditioning. Some refer to this as metabolic conditioning, fine.
No matter what you choose to call it, complexes deliver an awesome training effect in a really short amount of time.
Here’s the 20,000 foot view of my personal experiment using a kettlebell complex:
Duration: 90 days
Complex workouts per week: 3 (sprinkling in airbike session on the weekends)
Rounds per workout: 5
Reps per movement: 6 (except for kettlebell swings and pushups… 15 reps for those)
Equipment: 53lb (24kg) kettlebells x2
Rest: No rest between movements, 60 seconds of rest after each round
After the last rep of push-ups, rest for 60 seconds before starting the next round.
Again, one full pass through each of these exercises from beginning to end = 1 round.
Complete 5 total rounds.
Make sense?
The combination of 7 different exercises to stress the entire body, movement tempo, no rest between exercises and incomplete rest after each round makes complex training extremely challenging.
In 15 minutes or less, you trained the entire body, addressing strength and conditioning in one workout.
Complexes are generally made up of 4-8 exercises, mixing ballistic, upper and lower body resistance training, bodyweight and even ground based conditioning exercises like crawling, etc.
Results
Lean and efficient.
If I wasn’t such a dipshit, I would’ve documented exactly what happened with, before and after pictures, saving the chit chat. 🙄 Now you all think I’m liar.
My bodyfat percentage dropped below previous lows (my college hockey playing days). I can’t say this didn’t come at the expense of losing some muscle and raw strength, but I leaned out pretty aggressively.
Nutrition. The 90 day experiment was a reminder of the power nutritional consistency (calorie management, protein intake, hydration, etc) and how much impact it has on fat loss.
But I also have to tip my cap to impact of exercise. Exercise matters. It adds muscle, strength, burns calories and has a plethora of health benefits. I hate it when people ONLY preach nutrition or exercise for aesthetic gains.
Execute both and maximize your results.
Complex workouts can add lean muscle (resistance training) while accelerating fat loss.
Work capacity improved dramatically. How do I know? After roughly 6 weeks, I could’ve dropped the rest periods to 45 seconds and added another round. Specific adaptations to imposed demands. My body acclimated to the stress and I became efficient at crushing the workouts.
In the last few weeks of the experiment, I added a 6th round, then a 7th and closed it out with 8 rounds.
The negatives of adding more rounds was the increase in time it took to complete the workout, and a general feeling of diminishing return.
More volume isn’t always the answer, and in this case, I felt it was probably overboard.
Progressive loading. The purists will tar and feather me for not increasing the loading, but AGAIN, I deliberately avoided progressive loading. I wanted to see what zero change looked like after 90 days.
Strength gains plateaued quickly, but this was also expected bI never increased the weight of the kettlebells. Again, SAID Principle at work.
Without progressive increases in weight using the exact same exercises, strength stalls.
The goal was engage in a little experiment. 3 months of the exact same complex workout. No change, no deviation, just consistency.
Cautions
Know the exercises beforehand.
Don’t “learn” how to control the kettlebells while under fatigue.
Practice and develop familiarity with each of the exercises in ISOLATION FIRST.
Complex workouts are great for helping the fat loss process along. But this type of exercise is much different than aerobic steady state cardio. The fatigue hits hard.
This type of training is also very different than a traditional approach to lifting weights, where you’re performing reps and then taking full rest before the next work set.
Complexes are purposefully designed with incomplete rest periods. In the later rounds, you’re going to cringe at picking up the kettlebells to start again.
The key is find the right balance of weight used and rest periods. You want the session to be difficult but not impossible, yet not so easy that you walk away feeling like you could have done another 4 rounds.
5 rounds should be a bear 🐻
Lastly, whenever weights are being used to create a conditioning type training effect (metabolic conditioning) the user runs the risk of mishandling the equipment, losing body position and tension, etc… resulting in tweaks, strains and injury.
USE COMMON SENSE.
If you don’t have access to a pair of same weight kettlebells, this workout could be adjusted to use dumbbells aor a barbell instead.
Note: It’ll be difficult to include swings if you use a subsitute.
Progress slowly and adjust the training variables incrementally… Start with light weight, decrease the reps, add rest periods between each exercise, increase the rest after each round.
Over time, do the exact opposite of the previous suggestions to keep the workouts challenging. Increase weight, increase reps, reduce or remove rest periods between each exercise or shave off time after each round.
Let exercise technique be your guide. If you feel technique deteriorating, rest. Simle as that.
The goal is to control every movement, rep, set and stay the hell away from injury.
Closing
Complex training is perfect for people who are looking to get a TON of work done in a short amount of time.
In this busy world (career, kids, social life, hobbies, daily duties, etc) not every workout can last 90 minutes.
When you’re short on time and have the drive to get a sweat in, complexes are extremely valuable, without giving up much.
Plus, complex workout generally require very little space and equipment, so they are great for at-home workouts.
For people who are regularly lifting weights and doing cardio, I highly recommend adding in a complex day (two) throughout the training week. Mixing it up here and there can provide a refreshing break from your normal exercise regimen.