Jon Zhao Binary Strength Full Body Functional Training
Jon Zhao Binary Strength Full Body Functional Training
Jon Zhao Binary Strength Full Body Functional Training
JON ZHAO
ENGINEER HACKING + DEMOCRATIZING FITNESS
REVEALING 1st PRINCIPLES FOR FREE FOR FUN
The materials and content contained in this document are for general
health information only and are not intended to be a substitute for
professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
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To my son Andes
When I realized that if I died tomorrow, you will never know
who I really was, I decided to leave behind a trail for you.
Words are always meaningless without action.
Even though we won’t spend a lot of time together, I’m always
thinking of you.
From these videos and writings, you will learn who baba was
and still am.
They are an expression of my soul I’m recording for when
you’re old enough to understand. Baba never gives up on himself because I will never give up
on you. I know you’re watching me and every decision that I make. I’ve lost too much to not be
at my best every day.
You will learn about the world and yourself as you discover your own path, make your own
choices, and live a meaningful life.
No matter what worldly forces try to separate us, I will always be beside you in your own
journey because our bond is beyond this world.
Remember that I am always with you even when we’re physically apart.
I will always love you.
Thank you for being my son and for all the joy you bring me, the lessons you help me learn in
life, and the strength you give me.
My son Andes, be strong, be happy, be free.
~ Baba
March 2021
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Preface
After dropping 40lbs of fat in 4 months and building a crap ton
of lean muscle as an endomorph who gains fat easily and was
highly sensitive to carbs (what I mostly eat now), I realized the
reason why regular people like myself aren’t in shape easily isn’t
because of genetics (scientifically only limits 1% of the
population) or because we’re not trying (I’ve tried hard before).
If you follow the herd, you will be played. I don’t like seeing friends played by the fitness
and food industry, just like how I was without knowing it. I don’t want my son growing up
without knowing the truth, wasting time following popular ways of exercise and eating that are
inefficient or unhealthy. Low carb, keto, carnivore, OMAD, prioritize money making first, quick
results that usually don’t last. World class coaches rarely use these because they don’t teach
first principles and self-reliance. I eat between 2-3000 calories / day (depending on goal at the
time), 40% carbs, 25% fat, 35% protein and sometimes fast strategically.
My mission here is to learn and spread real fitness info to improve people’s lives in the most
efficient way possible by studying world class competitive coaches of various disciplines
(bodybuilding, calisthenics, boxing, marital arts, Olympic weight lifting, Olympic gymnastics,
physical and mental peak performance coaches), distill info, then share for free.
I will never sell any fitness information nor produce anything not worthy for my son. I
believe I can make a difference because I don’t rely on fitness for income. I have my dream job
at work so all guides I produce will be FREE. I believe it’s wrong when information limiting
humans is not free and easily available to the public. I define life as time spent at your true
physical and mental potential, time spent not at this level is not truly lived to me.
If you find this material useful, then help spread real health and fitness info with me, especially
to help professionals like you and me reach our physical and mental potential to work and live
better despite having a sedentary job, and ultimately obtain mastery of our mind and
body, making decisions with full consciousness, which is my definition of true freedom.
This is the beginning of a holistic program I will create and give away for FREE using the
same principles I used to drop 40 lbs in 4 months and maintain 10-12% bodyfat year-
round and sometimes going down to 8%. Achieving extraordinary results is stupidly easy
when you know exactly how, and most importantly what mistakes to avoid (99% online
info are mistakes), keeping results is even easier. But if you rely on the internet without
significant due diligence and critical thinking, you will likely be frustrated at why you’re not
easily getting and keeping results.
Some or all parts of this doc might offend you. You can do whatever you want. My channel and
this material will be most useful to those who chase after nothing except extraordinary results
and won’t let anything get in the way. No tradition. No bias. No ego (different than confidence).
I am not a professional coach. Consider hiring one if you need. I simply study materials from
professional coaches out of passion. If you know me in real life, I’ll answer questions for fun,
just ping me. But I am never going to give you cookie cutter programs, I will teach
mastery so you can create your own programs for yourself as your life changes. You will
achieve results faster than any program to the point people think you’re on steroids but you’re
not. You will keep those results forever. If you just want a step-by-step guide and think
you’ll get results and keep them, please close this doc.
• Strength Training - how to exercise to build muscle and burn fat by increasing
metabolism to produce the fastest results humanly possible for a lean and muscular
physique. Precise exercise form demos will be shown on the YouTube channel.
Upcoming:
• Nutrition Optimization
• Metabolism Control and Mastery – including hacks to eat insane amount of any food
without gaining fat (pizza, donuts, ice cream, crunchy salty snacks etc) – should not be
applied without mastery of strength training and nutrition first
This guide should be treated as a companion to YouTube videos but already contains
significant key knowledge for higher ROI workouts that you can immediately start applying
today to get fast results. I will keep this updated and add anything relevant as they come up.
You can always find the latest version of this guide at www.jonzhao.com. Welcoming feedback
via comments on YouTube or in real life if you know me in person. Thanks.
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Index
Workout Routines
Equipment
Exercises
First Principles (All Secrets to the Fastest
Results Humanly Possible)
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Workout Routines
Treat these as references. You should aim to master everything so you can create your own
routines as your life changes since you know your own body and life best.
Do not expect anyone to care about you more than yourself. Take full accountability.
I can give you shortcuts (I used several myself) but I choose not to because it will not make
your mind strong long term. I’m only interested in true strength of the mind now.
If you don’t have the willpower or simply don’t want to be self-sufficient and you are lucky
enough to find a true master level trainer, then consider hiring that person. If you can’t achieve
the results you want on your own even with this guide, you probably need a trainer to help
reach your goals. Nothing wrong with that.
Very few people will achieve their fitness goals despite knowing everything needed.
Getting to 6 pack lean requires mental strength. Even getting to 12-15% bodyfat is nearly
impossible for the average man these days because the mind is what gets fitness results
but 1) this generation of men are weak minded (love making excuses or lie to themselves) just
like how I was until I decided to become strong and 2) we’re being influenced by many
industries at once, making it nearly impossible to be fit, until you stop playing their game.
“… for the gate is wide and the road broad that leads to destruction, and those who enter
through it are many.” — Matthew 7:13
We may start out weak alone but can become strong together, and eventually remain strong
even when we stand alone. The word “comfort” originates from Latin, meaning strong
together. Now this generation defines it as “avoid pain”. Truly sad.
Everyone has different fitness goals. I don’t think everyone should be 6 pack lean, but I do
believe if a man wants to be fit but isn’t, the reality is that he’s either strong and in the process
of seeking or he gave up because he’s weak. Offensive maybe, but true. Strong men don’t
even think of excuses. They simply learn, do, measure, assess, repeat. This guide is a
passion project for me written for my son first so he will be strong and not weak. Its second
purpose is to see if anyone I know is strong. Its last purpose is to just share it to the world.
If you simply want results fast without self-mastery, please close this doc and consider
hiring a coach because the reality is this: your genes, lifestyle, tradition, family, mind, all affect
you so you require mastery to learn and be conscious of every aspect of your life, test, and
develop methods customized for yourself. This is what a coach does for you. All guides I
produce aims to help you obtain mastery and be your own coach. My #1 coaching
recommendation: https://prophysique.com/ (price undisclosed but word is $600+ / month).
Check out his YouTube channel (gold being given for free). I’m not paid for endorsing him, but
he’s the only coach I’ve come across who I can endorse fully. If you know me personally and
you’re interested in being personally trained by the same functional trainer that trained me, DM
me in real life and I’ll connect you. I don’t gain anything by endorsing my trainer.
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Phase 1: Foundations
Level: beginner
Primary optimization goal: wake body up and prepare for massive muscle
building in Phase 2: Build Phase, you might build some muscle
Phase duration: 4-6 weeks (depending on how fast you’re getting used to it)
Schedule: 2 days / week minimum, 40 min / workout
This routine is not optimizing for muscle building. It is optimizing for foundations to the
Phase 2: Build Phase to massively build muscle.
Keep this routine for 4 weeks at minimum up to 6 weeks. Treat as reference and customize to
your own needs by using exercises in the guide (for example swap out lunges for squats, or
mix them up). Change the days as you see fit. The more days you can do the better since
you’re increasing volume. I doubt you can do 4 times a week as a beginner. If you can, do it, I
challenge you. The person who will benefit is you :) But, do at minimum 2 times a week.
Every Week
Use [perfect form, slow controlled pace focused on eccentric phase, proper breathing,
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Use [3 min rest times between sets of exercises difficult for you, like push-ups and lying
leg raises, and 2 min for exercises you find easier]
Adjust reps according to your level, try to reach failure (cannot do 1 more rep) for each
set. Aim for doing sets with perfect form with as many reps as the last set. It’s more
important to do as many sets properly as you can than skip sets to get through the
routine because we want the muscle groups worked to reach hypertrophy, if you didn’t
finish some exercises in your timebox, leave it for next time and do those first next time.
Supermans
a. Regular supermans: 1 x 5
b. Y supermans: 1 x 5
c. W supermans: 1 x 5
d. T supermans: 1 x 5
Bridges - 1 x 15
1. Push-ups - 3 x 10 to 15
2. Inverted rows - 2 x 10 to 15
• If you don’t have dip bars yet, replace this with 2 x 15 supermans (pick
any 2 out of the 4 variations) and skip supermans in the warmup
3. Lunges - 2 x 10 to 15 each leg
• Do weighted lunges if you can
4. Single leg bridges - 2 x 10 to 15
• If single leg is too difficult to do at least 6 on each leg, do regular bridges
5. Lying leg raises - 3 x 10 to 15
6. Bonus (physio exercise for foundational strength and mobility) – 2 x 10 (on each
side alternated) bird dogs
• Do weighted bird dogs if you can
} // end workout
Phase 2: Build
Level: intermediate
Primary optimization goal: extremely fast maximum muscle building
Phase duration: 6-8 weeks (depending on how fast you’re getting used to it)
Schedule: 2 days / week minimum, 40 min / workout
This routine is optimizing for massive muscle building. It’s optimizing for muscle mass
first, density second, achieved through hypertrophy. The muscles built here will have an
optimal balance of Type 1 and Type 2 muscle fibers for true functional strength. The physique
you build will not be the same as bodybuilders, but it will look athletic.
Keep this routine for 6 weeks at minimum and then you can make it your maintenance
routine like I do to be sub 10% bodyfat year-round or whatever level you want to maintain at. I
use the same principles to customize a routine very similar to this to maintain muscle mass,
density, and a high metabolism.
Treat as reference and customize to your own needs by using exercises in the guide, swap out
exercises or mix them up as you desire to maximize your enjoyment and boost positive
feedback loop. Change the days as you see fit. The more days you can do the better since
you’re increasing volume. Do at minimum 2 times a week to trigger changes in your body but I
challenge you to do it more than 2 times a week, even up to 4 times a week, can you do it?
Every Week
Use [perfect form, slow controlled pace focused on eccentric phase, proper breathing,
common sense listening to body, your fav pump up music]
Use [3 min rest times between sets of exercises difficult for you and 2 min for exercises
you find easier]
Adjust reps according to your level, try to reach failure (cannot do 1 more rep) for each
set. Aim for doing sets with perfect form with as many reps as the last set. It’s more
important to do as many sets properly as you can than skip sets to get through the
routine because we want the muscle groups worked to reach hypertrophy, if you didn’t
finish some exercises in your timebox, leave it for next time and do those first next time.
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switch (day) {
case push:
do {
3 x 6-8 dips off pushup bar // if too easy, do dips with dip bars
// try to do the below with pushup bars for greater range of motion
3 x 6-8 Pike Pushups
3 x 10-12 Declined Pushups
3 x 10-12 Regular Pushups
}
case pull:
do {
3 x 10-12 Regular Inverted Rows
3 x 10-12 Declined Inverted Rows
3 x 10-12 Underhand Grip Inverted Rows
3 x 10-12 Ground Assisted Pullups (single leg variation preferred)
2 x 15 Jumping Negative Pullups
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do {
2 x 12 Knee Raise Twists
2 x 12 Knee Raise
2 x 60 sec Plank Hold
• If you can’t hold 60 sec, take a very brief break after your
max duration, then hold again, repeat until 60 sec is up
2 x 12 Reverse Crunch
2 x 12 Lying Leg Raise Twists
2 x 12 Lying Leg Raise
}
}
} // end workout
It’s the exact same as the Phase 2: Build routine above except during your rest times you’re
going to do more work by training a secondary area of your body following these principles:
• Unless you’re training just to maintain muscle and not to build more muscle, do not
combine pull and push exercises on the same day because often they conflict, even
pushups use back muscles, and even pullups use chest. Push and pull compound
movements are too taxing on the body to combine for effective workouts and recovery.
• If you’re using dip bars for ab exercises like knee raises, you’re training incredible
isometric shoulder endurance and strength, so avoid combining push exercises with
these ab exercises.
• If you’re using rings for ab exercises like knee raises, you’re training incredible scapula
stabilization endurance and strength, so avoid combining abs and pull exercises.
• If you’re training push exercises that engage the abs such as pushups, avoid combining
with ab exercises.
• You can generally always combine leg exercises with push, pull, ab exercises.
Examples:
Push or pull day Push or pull Ab exercises (not with pushups, try
dips or pike pushups) or leg and
glute exercises
Legs and glutes day Legs and glutes Push, pull, or ab exercises
I’ve tried this method before but I quickly stopped using it because I’ve learned:
1. I enjoy the rest times between sets a lot, and I will never introduce anything that
makes me feel negative during a workout, such as cardiovascular stress by doing
more work during rest times. Workouts must be 100% enjoyable to me and
something I look forward to in an infinite positive feedback loop.
2. It’s very hard to time rest times properly. If I just did pushups, I need to rest 3
minutes, and say I rest 1 minute then start doing lunges, I’ll have to continue
pushups when the 3 minutes rest is up, but then I need to track a separate rest time
for the lunges. You can definitely figure out some combination where you’re training
leg exercises just enough reps that fit into push exercises etc but I don’t want to be
thinking during a workout, I go into flow and focus on the movements by instinct
without thought to achieve a fully conscious mind muscle connection.
3. I use rest times to focus on good breathing to maximize ROI by reducing cortisol, the
stress hormone. This way I get the benefits of breathing meditation during a workout,
and it’s one of the most important levers of boosting metabolism, optimizing
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recovery, to burn fat and build muscle optimally long term. But if you’re in a rush for
some short term results you can try this method.
The moment you fall off the schedule (inevitable for most people), just get back on.
Push, pull, leg, abs workout split is a good cycle that optimizes ROI, max recovery, and max
volume within each week, resting at least 48 hours between muscle groups worked,
sample 2-3 days a week plan that cycles between push, pull, leg, abs days:
Week 1
Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
push rest rest pull rest rest legs
Week 2
Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
rest rest abs rest rest push rest
Week 3
Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
rest pull rest rest legs rest rest
Week 4
Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
abs rest rest push rest rest pull
Or you can do full body but likely will be able to do less volume with higher recovery demands:
Every Week
Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
full body rest rest full body rest rest rest
I currently do a push, pull, abs, leg routine 4 days on, 3 days off where legs and push fall on
Saturday and Sunday when I have more time and I do a 60 min workout vs 45 min on
weekdays. I train this frequently because I’m still pushing to unlock new skills but if I just
wanted to maintain, I would drop to 2-3 x 45 min workouts / week.
If I want to train for skills for fun, say pull movements, I’ll swap legs to 45 min on weekdays,
and make the pull day land on weekend to have 60 min for pull exercises.
I try to train legs for 60 min on weekends because I consume significantly higher calories on
weekends (via a concept called double refeeds which I’ll include in this guide later that only
works at ~10-12% bodyfat or lower), so it’s high ROI to take advantage of high calories for
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increased workout intensity, but especially legs since they activate the most amount of
muscles in the body and trigger the highest metabolic and central nervous system stress.
When the weather is warm and I’m mountain biking or rollerblading on the weekend, I’m going
to avoid training legs that weekend and for the next couple days after the activities using legs
otherwise I’d be overtraining since my rollerblade and biking sessions feel intense to me. If you
do heavy leg cardio sessions without giving your leg muscles the proper time to recover, you’re
just delaying recovery and will have poor performance.
Listen to your body and adapt routines to your own life based on first principles.
Live your life first, don’t be played by the fitness movement and industry which makes you rigid
and unable to truly be at your genetic potential and enjoy life to the max at the same time.
Equipment Used
There are many exercises in this guide that are 100% bodyweight with no equipment. In
general, functional training uses equipment only to accelerate bodyweight training.
All my material will be FREE but if you’re interested in supporting the YouTube channel’s
expenses and you want to get the same home workout equipment I use myself, you can do so
by using my affiliate links for products you’re already going to buy anyways and make Amazon
fund a real camera better than my iPhone so I can film better videos, thanks in advance.
Here’s the complete list of all home workout equipment I use to lose weight, burn fat, build
muscle and maintain peak shape. This is all I use for primary workouts. Costs way less than
conventional weight lifting gear and takes up less space:
1. Dip Bars (I consider this a must-have for myself, everything else is useful but this is
critical, more versatile than dip station): product on Amazon (Canada) | product on
Amazon (USA) – these are height adjustable to do both push and pull movements
2. Push Up Bars (increase full range of motion for push movements): product on Amazon
– these are the most stable ones
4. Resistance Band Set (super versatile for stretches, assist exercises to progress
further, and resistance band exercises): product on Amazon
7. Foam Roller (speed up recovery, generally good for health): product on Amazon
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8. Olympic Rings (MAX ROI muscle building + skills training, the end game gear, use
when ready, follow along and progress to use this, if rushed you will injure yourself
almost guaranteed. Use this to perform movements that 99.999% of the population
cannot, such as a 360 pull or back lever on rings – this is part the endgame fun) – BE
WARNED: use outside at own discretion, if done shirtless in the summer at < 10%
bodyfat, you will attract significant attention, from both genders: product on Amazon
9. Weight Vest (MAX ROI strength building to do harder movements, the end game gear,
use when ready, progress to this): product on Amazon
Exercises
Push Exercises
Pushup
Areas worked: primary: chest, triceps | secondary: shoulders, core, back (especially if you’re
doing pushup bar pushups for full range of motion)
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
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Form:
• Distance of hands control different muscle activations, wider uses more chest, narrower
uses more triceps, normal position is to start with hands aligned with your shoulders,
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when looking down, your hands should be right under your shoulders in a straight line
aligned with your shoulders, it’s ok to be slightly wider than shoulder, depends on what
you feel is stable for your frame
• Before you start moving down, with your hands on the floor, try to rotate your hands
outwards to push the elbows inwards, towards your body, this depresses the
shoulders for stability and max muscle recruitment
• Squeeze your abs, squeeze your glutes (butt), find a comfortable place for your feet
(preferably feet together to make your body work harder to stabilize), from this position,
with hands and feet planted firmly, compress your entire body as if you are trying to
make your hands touch your feet (but you can’t)
• When you move down, at the bottom, your hands should be at your nipple line
• On the way down, your elbows must be kept tucked close to the body, not going
outwards to the sides, this prevents shoulder injuries and activates the correct muscles
• To prevent back injury, do not curve your back, keep squeezing the core for each rep
on the way down and continue to keep the core engaged and tight to prevent back
from arching, back should be a straight line from neck to waist
• To assist the core in stabilizing your lower back, keep squeezing your butt
• Your entire body should form a tight kinetic chain throughout the entire movement
• On the way up, at the very top, push further for the last pump to further activate
shoulders, chest, and triceps, push until you can no longer be any higher
• If you follow the above, you now understand the ultimate correct form of the push-up,
and several important functional training principles applied to a basic exercise that 99%
of the population don’t know
• If done correctly, 12-20 repetitions should be very challenging
You can max ROI by using a pushup bar to increase full range of motion and reduce wrist
pressure, this will also train your upper back. Nowadays I don’t do pushups without a pushup
bar + weight vest unless I’m doing advanced exercises like pseudo planch pushups or archer
pushups, which aren’t done with a pushup bar to prevent wrist injuries at extreme angles.
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(twist your biceps so they face forward, wrist firm, in straight line with rest of arm, not bent)
(go as low as you can where you can still come up)
Diamond Pushups
If you place your hands together to form a diamond and apply each of the correct form from
the regular pushup, you will emphasize arm (triceps) muscles more.
Wide Pushups
If you place your hands wider, with your fingers pointing outwards more and apply each of the
correct form from the regular pushup, you will emphasize your outer chest muscles more.
However, the regular pushup is shown to have generally the same chest developing
effectiveness as the wide pushup. Although a wide stance will target minor chest areas the
regular form does not, so it’s good to mix in for total body strength.
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Decline Pushups
Decline pushups are harder and trains the upper chest more. Training upper chest is the
fastest way to increase chest muscle mass.
(increase full range of motion to max ROI using a pushup bar, works all muscles way more)
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Pike Pushup
Areas worked: primary: shoulders | secondary: triceps
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Form:
• Only do this exercise after mastering the form of the regular pushup
• Start by placing the pushup bars and your hands at shoulder level
• Stretch back while walking your feet as close to your hands as possible while keeping
your legs almost perfectly straight (will depend on your mobility)
• For the entire movement try to keep your legs as straight as possible but just listen to
your body because it depends on your mobility
• Now gradually lean forward while keeping your arms and legs straight (doesn’t need to be
locked out and perfectly straight)
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• As you progress and get stronger, you can decrease the angle until you eventually lift
off the ground for part of the movement, max ROI as you develop stabilization muscles
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• Keep your wrist position perfectly stable and aligned with your arm to prevent injury as
shown below:
(correct: wrist perfectly straight with rest of arm, back of hand face to the side)
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• You can do pike pushups without a pushup bar but it’s low ROI due to lack of range of
motion, unless you do it on an edge so your head can go below the level of your hand
like this:
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Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
• Only do this exercise after mastering the form of the regular pushup and preferably also
mastering the form of pike pushups
• To train shoulders and chest more, the ideal leg position is to have weight distributed
forward as shown here with feet in front of the center of gravity, not bending knees and
having feet behind your center of gravity as most people do
• Form an L with your body and keep your core engaged to prevent back from arching,
your back should be straight
• Lean forward where your shoulder is in front of your hands to use more shoulders and
point your chest towards the floor
• Move down and go as low as around when elbow is slightly below 90 degrees, don’t go
further to prevent unnecessary stress on shoulders (especially ligaments and tendons)
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• Push until you cannot push any further at the very top for extra shoulder and triceps
activation, and even some chest activation too
• Make sure the shoulder is moving up and down in a perfectly straight line in the
movement to get the highest ROI. If you started leaning forward, when you go down you
and when you come back up you should always be leaning forward. If you can’t do this
it means you’re leaning too far ahead for your level, take a step back.
• If you just want to focus on triceps, you can keep your body completely upright with your
chest directly facing forward and legs behind you instead of the L shape
• If you just want to focus on chest, then push your chest in front of your shoulders since
whatever muscle is in front will carry most of the load, and point your chest down to
simulate an in the air pushup
• Instead of focusing on pushing down with your hands, imagine using your elbows and
biceps to push inwards as if trying to make the bars touch each other (but they can’t),
this will fully engage your chest
• When moving up and down your chest should be facing the floor at the same angle
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Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
It’s safer to use a pushup bar over a bench or chair or anything because a pushup bar is ideal
for wrist angle, preventing unnecessary strain on your wrist, but you can use a bench or
ottoman or whatever if you want, just pay attention to your wrist. This is a much lower ROI
exercise than dips on dip bars, lacking range of motion, only do this if you can’t do dips on dip
bars yet or if you don’t have dip bars.
With platform:
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Form:
• Form an L as shown above, elbows tucked close to your body, legs straight and heel
on the ground
• The most important thing to remember to properly activate triceps and avoid shoulder
injury is to pull your shoulders back and push your chest out to avoid your shoulders
being in front of your chest. Your shoulders should be behind your chest by externally
rotating your shoulders, NOT internally rotating them
• Push your chest out and engage your shoulders, push down, so they are depressed not
elevated
• Move down while keeping your elbows tucked close to your body, go as low as you can
then come back up, push at the end until you cannot push any further for extra muscle
activation
• Do everything slow and controlled 2 seconds down 1 second hold at bottom, 1-2
seconds to come up
• Don’t make your butt touch the ground so you keep constant tension
• As you perform reps, you’ll know you’ve engaged your shoulders and depressed them
properly if you turned your head to face sideways 90 degrees either side and do a
repetition but your chin cannot touch your shoulders and is always above them
Pull Exercises
Superman
Regular Superman
Areas worked: primary: upper and mid back, shoulders
Repetitions: this is a foundational exercise, so you don’t need to go until failure, play by ear.
Your mind is the limit. You already know the more the better but don’t overdo it, especially if
you have shoulder injuries. To increase difficulty, add light weights in hands (5-15 lbs, 20 lbs is
likely too heavy for smaller muscles to handle.
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(raise arm as high as they can go, using your back to counter gravity)
Form:
• Lie down on your stomach, relaxed, arms straight ahead, forehead touching ground,
keep your eyes on the ground, neck neutral, do not look up to prevent lower back
pressure slowly raise your arms as high as possible (1 sec), hold for 1 sec, then slowly
down (1 sec), repeat
• This is primarily to build back muscles, so keep your hips and entire lower body on the
ground. Squeeze butt to keep spine aligned and protect lower back
Y Superman
Areas worked: primary: upper and mid back, shoulders – this variation builds strength in
different supportive tissues for foundational strength to help you progress to harder exercises
Form:
• Lie down on your stomach, relaxed, make a Y with your arms, thumbs facing ceiling,
arms straight, forehead touching ground, keep your eyes on the ground, neck neutral,
not raised up to prevent lower back pressure, slowly raise your arms as high as possible
(1 sec), hold for 1 sec, then slowly down (1 sec), repeat
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• This is primarily to build back muscles, so keep your hips and entire lower body on the
ground. Squeeze butt to keep spine aligned and protect lower back.
W Superman
Areas worked: primary: upper and mid back, shoulders – this variation builds strength in
different supportive tissues for foundational strength to help you progress to harder exercises
Form:
• Lie down on your stomach, relaxed, make a W with your arms, bending your elbow 90
degree, forehead touching ground, keep your eyes on the ground, neck neutral, not
raised up to prevent lower back pressure, slowly raise your arms as high as possible (1
sec), hold for 1 sec, then slowly down (1 sec), repeat
• This is primarily to build back muscles, so keep your hips and entire lower body on the
ground. Squeeze butt to keep spine aligned and protect lower back.
T Superman
Areas worked: primary: upper and mid back, shoulders – this variation builds strength in
different supportive tissues for foundational strength to help you progress to harder exercises
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Form:
• Lie down on your stomach, relaxed, make a T with your arms, arms straight, thumb
facing ceiling, forehead touching ground, keep your eyes on the ground, neck neutral,
not raised up to prevent lower back pressure, slowly raise your arms as high as possible
(1 sec), hold for 1 sec, then slowly down (1 sec), repeat
• This is primarily to build back muscles, so keep your hips and entire lower body on the
ground. Squeeze butt to keep spine aligned and protect lower back
Bird Dog
Areas worked: upper and mid back, glutes, shoulders
Repetitions: this is a foundational exercise, so you don’t need to go until failure, play by ear.
Your mind is the limit. You already know the more the better but don’t overdo it, especially if
you have shoulder injuries.
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(start in neutral position, back straight, core engaged, shoulders depressed, protracted)
(extend arm and legs, opposite side of legs to arm, diagonal path)
(reset after every rep, back straight, core engaged, shoulders depressed, protracted)
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Form:
• Start from neutral position, lift your left knee and right hand off the ground, tuck that leg
in and touch your right elbow, then extend that right arm and left leg out, hold for 2
seconds, then go back to neutral position and repeat using the opposite arm and leg
• Keep eyes down, neck neutral, to prevent lower back strain
• Engage core to keep spine aligned, not hyper-extended
Same thing as regular bird dogs except using dumbbells. Pick a weight challenging for you but
not so challenging that you can’t even do 6-8 reps (since this exercise is not about reaching
hypertrophy)
Start in neutral position, alternate from one side, back to neutral, then to the other side.
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Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Form:
• Before you start, adjust the bar to the highest level at first because the lower you go the
harder it is so just try it out and adjust but start at the highest level first
• Start by getting under the bar, grip the bar keeping enough distance between your
hands so your wrist forms a straight line forward with your shoulder, from here you can
move a little bit wider or narrower depending on what’s comfortable for you (narrower
will use more forearms and wider uses more back)
• Squeeze your abs and butt to make your body a tight straight line and tight. This helps
activate your back muscles properly
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• Make sure the bar is aligned to your chest level, if you hung a string down the bar it
shouldn't fall on your face, or stomach, it should be right at your nipple line
• Point your chest out towards the bar while gripping the bar to straighten your spine
• Without bending your elbows, keeping them locked out straight, pull your shoulder back.
When done correctly your spine is not curved anymore and is locked into a straight line.
This is called scapula protraction
• From here try to twist your elbows inwards, as if you're trying to break the bar in half
from the middle with your hands, this depresses the shoulder for optimal back muscle
activation and optimal force transfer in the kinetic loop you just formed, the bar as an
extension of your body
• Remember this position because this is the correct neutral position each repetition must
return back to
• From here pull, slow and controlled 1-2 seconds up, hold for a second at the isometric
phase on top, then slowly down about 1-2 seconds. You can even use 1 second to
pullup but use a slower pace when returning. This is how I perform them to save time
because we know 70% of your workout results come from the eccentric phase, on the
way down
• As you progress, lower the bar to make the exercise more challenging.
You can also do feet planted in the elevated form to train different areas of your back:
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Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Form:
• Very similar to the inverted row’s feet planted form but key difference is your feet goes
as close to your body as possible vs far away as possible in the inverted row
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• Key for this exercise: focus all time in eccentric phase to build up pullup strength so
go up quickly and then come down extremely slowly, 3-4 seconds down
• This is the same as if you jumped up to a bar and focused purely on a slow and
controlled descend of the eccentric phase of a pullup. If you have a set up that allows
this, do that instead
• Same as regular ground assisted pullup above except balanced on one leg only, this is
what I used to build up pullup strength fast before I started doing pullups
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Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise and especially good for
increasing endurance of your back muscles to help you progress to do proper pullups. Do
however many you can with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Form:
• Keep your core tight and the weight of your legs in front of you to better engage your
back
• At the very top, hold for a second or so then slowly come down
• Go up fast but come down slowly on the negative (eccentric) phase
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You can train biceps more with the underhand grip (left) or use the hammer grip to make it
easier on the shoulders (right)
Ab Exercises
Lying Leg Raise
Areas worked: abs
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Form:
• Lie on your back flat, for extra core engagement, elevate upper body slightly off ground
by balancing using forearms and palms on the floor by your side
• In the beginning you should feel an empty area around your lower back that doesn’t
touch the ground. Then engage your core so you feel your lower back touches the
ground. From here, keep your core tight and raise your legs.
• Do not let your back form that empty space, the lower back should always touch the
ground by keeping core engaged
• Do not use hips or legs, focus your mind to lift your legs by squeezing your abs and
make your abs do all the work to curl your legs towards your chest
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• Do not lift past the point where gravity is helping you instead of making it harder for you,
do not lift past the point where your butt isn’t on the ground anymore (some part of your
butt will be off the ground but important cue is tailbone remains on ground)
• Go as high as you can with this proper form until fully vertical, perpendicular to the
ground
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
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Form:
• The exact form as the lying leg raise above, but legs slightly more bent as you turn in
circles pointing using your feet
• Stick to one circular direction for each set. Switch from clockwise to counter clock-wise
and vice versa per set (not per rep)
• You can control the difficulty using the angle between your leg and the ground and how
much you bend your knees. The further your leg is and least compressed (close to
body) the more work your abs need to do. Select the combination most difficult for you
that still allows you to do at least 6-8 reps with perfect form.
Reverse Crunch
Areas worked: front abs
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
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Form:
• Lie flat on your back and bend your legs at your knee so your calves and thigh form
about a 90 degrees angle
• In the beginning you should feel an empty area around your lower back that doesn’t
touch the ground. Then engage your core so you feel your lower back touches the
ground. From here, keep your core tight and raise your legs.
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• Do not let your back form that empty space for this part of the moment, the lower
back should be touching the ground as you work hard to keep your core engaged
• Do not use hips or legs, focus your mind to lift your legs by squeezing your abs and
make your abs do all the work to curl your legs towards your chest
• Do not lift past the point where gravity is helping you instead of making it harder for you
• Unlike the leg raise, we want to lift past the point where your butt and lower back
isn’t on the ground anymore because the legs are bent which will make your abs
work as long as the calves are below your abs, but as soon as most weight in your legs
is right on top of your abs, tension will be lost
• This is why the true form of the reverse crunch lifts the entire lower back off the ground
and straightens the leg to make your abs compress further
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• If you’re strong enough, do the second part of the reverse crunch by lifting your lower
back off the ground as you press your hands into the ground to counter balance, your
legs should be vertical or near vertical, do not tilt towards your face because that would
make it easier and make gravity take on the work, always make it harder for yourself
• Imagine kicking up but instead of your legs it’s actually your abs doing the kicking
• Slow and controlled, 1-2 seconds on way up
• Do not rest at the easiest position for more than 1 second, as soon as you feel the
tension in your abs releasing, it’s time to slowly come down again, always keeping the
core engaged throughout the movement
• Come down slow and controlled, 1-2 seconds on the way down
• Reset the form after finishing each repetition, re-engaging core so lower back
touches the ground then start another repetition
• DO NOT make your feet touch the ground, lower your leg so your feet almost
touches the ground so you always keep the tension. If your feet touch the ground your
brain will want to relax.
Plank Hold
Areas worked: primary: abs | secondary: shoulders
Duration: try to target 30 sec - 1 minute to start, then work up the duration 5-10 seconds more
each new workout session, challenge yourself to hold longer every workout, hold as long as
possible until failure, your mind will give out before your body does, remember the pain is
temporary and exists primarily in the mind
Form:
• Elbows should be shoulder width apart, head neutral, looking down to prevent pressure
on spine
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• Body should be a straight line, do not curve your back, otherwise lower back will be
pressured and injured over time, squeeze your butt and core, then your back will be
straight automatically
• Do not drop your butt to make it easier
• To make it extra difficult for maximum return on investment, compress your body by
imagining trying to make your feet touch your elbows but you can’t because they’re
planted to the ground, this compresses the core even further
• Hold as long as possible while your back can be straight, stop when you lose control of
your core and your back starts to curve
Knee Raise
Areas worked: front abs
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Form:
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle building exercise, so do however many you can do
with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Form:
• Form is exactly the same as the knee raise above, but instead of your knee and legs
facing forward, lift them to the side
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• You can alternate sides per rep or concentrate on one side then move to the other,
change it up for fun
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Repetitions: this is a foundational exercise, so you don’t need to go until failure, play by ear.
Your mind is the limit. You already know the more the better but don’t overdo it, listen to body,
there shouldn’t be pain.
Form:
• Start with butt and both feet on ground
• Place hands flat beside you to balance
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• Slow and controlled, raise hips by squeezing glutes (butt), force should be in heels of
feet, not middle of feet or front of feet, you should feel the pressure on the heels only
Repetitions: this is a foundational exercise, so you don’t need to go until failure, play by ear.
Your mind is the limit. You already know the more the better but don’t overdo it, listen to body,
there shouldn’t be pain.
Form:
Lunges
Areas worked: primary: glutes | secondary: legs (quads)
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle AND endurance building exercise, so do however
many you can do with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
• Start standing upright in neutral position, core engaged, back straight, shoulders
perfectly leveled with ground, looking straight ahead, neck neutral
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• kneel down on one leg by moving one leg back, after coming back to neutral, move the
other leg back
Form:
Weighted Lunges
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle AND endurance building exercise, so do however
many you can do with proper form until failure or close to failure (1-2 reps left in the tank)
Select a weight challenging for you but not so challenging that you can’t even do 6-8
repetitions on each side.
Form is the same, but if adding weights, make sure to keep core extra engaged and neck
neutral looking forward throughout entire movement to prevent spine from arching.
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Squats
Areas worked: glutes (butt), quads
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle AND endurance building exercise, so do however
many you can do with proper form until near failure
(going all the way down is optional, depends on mobility, as long as glutes is doing most of the
work and fully activated, have to go to at least 90 degrees)
Form:
• Keep your spine straight and aligned by keeping your head neutral looking ahead and
contracting your core to prevent lower back from arching.
• Squat down slowly 2 sec, hold 2 sec, go back up 2 sec slow and controlled
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• Go as low as you can without losing balance, on the way up, depending on where you
want to target, either mostly use legs or squeeze your butt and make your glutes
primarily work to push you up instead of legs – I recommend making the glutes do most
of the work because we sit too long and tend to cause weak glutes which slows
metabolism (largest muscle in body) and poor posture
• You should feel most of the pressure in your heels
You can increase difficulty with a resistance band wrapped behind your neck, supported by
your traps and your hands on top and the middle of your feet on the bottom as shown below.
Goblet Squats
Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle AND endurance building exercise, so do however
many you can do with proper form until close to failure
You can increase resistance using one dumbbell, which is superior to holding two dumbbells
by the side if it’s the same weight, because the core works more to prevent the body from
tilting forward.
Form:
• The exact same form as the regular bodyweight squat above but holding a single
dumbbell like this:
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Unilateral movements like this counter muscle imbalances for complete functional strength.
Form:
• Start in neutral position, core tight, glutes engaged, eyes looking straight ahead, arms
out, locked hands as shown below.
• Squat down side to side, slow and controlled, feel every area engaged
• Do not pause at the neutral position in the middle, always keep tension in your thighs by
shifting weight from one leg to the other
• Remember to always keep the spine straight by contracting your core and looking
straight ahead so your neck is neutral
• You can either tilt your feet inwards so they’re always planted or tilt them outwards so
heel is on the ground, it doesn’t matter, whatever is comfortable
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• You can either lift the dumbbell and put it into position like I do, or place it on the ground
in the vertical position and use both hands to lift it up, whatever feels safest given your
strength level
• With weights it might be more stable if both feet are always planted on the ground vs
having the unweighted feet’s heel on the ground like I do in the unweighted side to side
squat above. Feel it out for yourself.
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Repetitions: this is a highly optimal muscle AND endurance building exercise, so do however
many you can do with proper form until close to failure
Form:
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This is something I will always do on leg days because of how high ROI it is. Both legs are
constantly engaged while building unilateral strength and preventing muscle imbalances.
Form:
• Same as regular Bulgarian split squat but you will need to engage the core extra hard to
counter the weight and still ensure body is perfectly upright and shoulders perfectly
leveled with ground by looking straight. Push your chest out and shoulders back.
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• Move down while keeping the phalanges of your feet, the part where your toes connect
with your feet, always planted
• Be careful move weight side to side, always engage core to prevent lower back injury
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First Principles
My System
The system I use today is largely a continuation of master level functional training my trainer
instilled in me, built on first principles for superior results and extremely fast body
transformations. I simply broke it down and mapped it into a system with core levers that are
repeatable and causes predictable results. Then I combined 2 years of scientific research and
testing on myself to go even further beyond for max workout return on investment.
I’m continuously researching exercise science, learnings from true experts, field testing, and
incorporating lessons learned back. There is no definitive “method” or “way” since it’s a living
and evolving system.
The reason why this system is superior for building a lean and muscular physique much faster
than other methods I know of is summarized below:
1) Extremely fast results due to maximum return on investment by applying 80/20 rule,
minimizing time wasted in any suboptimal elements of training, zero tolerance of waste
2) Maximum muscle building efficiency by:
o Performing exercises in ways that causes optimal muscle building
o Training large muscles but also smaller ones often untrained by weight lifting
o Strengthening joints, ligaments, and supportive tissue strength to unlock higher
and higher ROI exercises
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The only additions I made to the original program I used myself, to further improve, is:
1) For first half of the game (beginners) - I removed the need for any expensive and heavy
home gym equipment like barbells
2) For late and end game - I added elite level calisthenics for even higher ROI
Like when Bruce Lee developed Jeet Kwon Do, we must let go of ego, dogma, and take what
works from every school of training. Be formless, like water, and strike your enemy.
Who’s the enemy?
The enemy is the part of you that wants to settle and be average.
Your primal endgame true self lies deep within you already, waiting to be unlocked. Once
unlocked, you will experience life completely differently, physically, mentally, socially.
You will literally experience time in a completely new way.
You will feel your cells resonate at a different frequency than the average person. This boosts
performance at work, life, whatever you pursue.
Time is all we have in the end. When you’re at peak state, you get to experience the same 24
hours you had before but in a completely new way that will make you ask yourself: “how did I
even live life before this?”
It would be a shame if you grew old and didn’t know what this felt like.
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• I don’t train only to look good but I do want to look lean and muscular and NOT like a
bodybuilder so I customized the training to perfectly align training and aesthetic goals.
For aesthetics, the #1 formula for looking lean is: the ratio of bodyweight to strength.
If you optimize for this ratio, you will NOT look like a bodybuilder, you will look like an
extremely strong and lean athlete. The style of training I developed optimizes for this
ratio by design because I am constantly trying to perform more difficult moves that can
be too challenging with even 5lbs more weight. This means the training goal aligns with
the aesthetic goal. This is where most people fail because the fitness industry lies
to you on purpose.
o With bodybuilding, at some point you will find it very very difficult to optimize for
strength to bodyweight ratio along with a diet you can maintain. Greg Ogallagher
from Kinobody (people love hating on this guy due to his earlier materials but
he’s a lot more experienced now) also talks about this in his video.
o Bodybuilding with weights has a limit to how much you can eat to be lean.
o Bodyweight training aka calisthenics allows you to easily eat much more calories
while being lean. This is why Olympic gymnastics’ diets are incredibly satisfying
when compared to a bodybuilder of the same weight class and leanness, even
when their training time is the same, in fact bodybuilders tend to have to work
harder and longer to get the same results.
• Bodybuilding with heavy weights and machines is unnatural. Our ancestors didn’t lift
300lbs for fun. Weightlifting, powerlifting, and gym culture should be treated as
things people enjoy doing as a fun hobby but it is not the most efficient method
to become lean and muscular. It’s highly inefficient and suboptimal but better than not
exercising.
• Lifting progressively heavier weight and hitting PRs (personal records) is useful
for confidence building (but most people cannot control their ego nor know the
difference between confidence and ego), but it’s not efficient for building a lean
muscular physique mainly because of recovery demands, making it harder to maximize
volume to build muscle while eating in a way that won’t make you gain fat. This is why
bodybuilders are stuck in cycles of cutting and bulking (or even lean bulk) and have a
harder time with body re-composition where you don’t need to be exclusively in a calorie
deficit or surplus. Functional training with bodyweight is the most efficient method
to build muscle WHILE in a deficit. This is how you get extraordinary results fast.
• Bodybuilding with weights, especially heavy weights is also extremely inefficient for
muscle building because good technique allows you lift incredible amount of
weight, your body will optimize for how to lift that weight in that specific
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movement pattern. This is fine but inefficient for getting fast results of losing weight,
burning fat, building muscle, building true functional strength useful in life, more energy.
• Functional training focuses on inefficiency (safely) and forces the body to work hard
to stabilize, usually with very long complete full body kinetic chains that are continuously
engaged in every movement. Dramatically higher ROI in the same timeframe. In fact,
bench press and deadlift performance actually increase dramatically after functional
training, specifically with rings. Yes, you hit higher PRs with bench press and deadlifts
without doing them for years. Several true experts already explain this. We can
strategically use inefficiency (not always) when it can produce more efficient workouts.
• Your kid(s) will not give a crap how much you bench, deadlift or squat, but they’ll
be excited if you show them a handstand, 360 degrees pull, a human flag, front and
back lever, defy gravity. Most importantly, you will know you can do things 99.999% of
the population will never be able to do and obtain mastery over your entire body.
Bodybuilders who can lift incredible weights cannot even do 10 pullups with correct
form, without cheating, never mind a front lever.
• Weights can and will be used in functional training, especially for legs and glutes,
but no need to go heavy. There are movements that are difficult even for advanced
athletes with only 10-20lbs dumbbells. It does not need to involve heavy squats,
deadlifts, bench press etc. Do them for fun if you want.
• Heavy weights also increase injury risk and 100% causes unnecessary tendon,
joints, and ligament stress as you age. I’m optimizing to look and feel young as I age
to truly live at the fullest.
• Movements that are natural to the body are ideal to create a lean and muscular
physique, like the Greek statues or Tarzan, by effectively pushing our bodies to grow,
adapt, and perform at their biological potential, reaching an ideal balance of strength,
endurance, and energy that’s actually useful in life. A side benefit is body proportions
that humans are genetically programmed to find appealing.
• Activating long and complete kinetic chains in the body stimulates the central
nervous system and maximizes lean muscle mass growth and boosts in
metabolism that cannot be achieved in the same timeframe using less efficient ways.
• Functional training focuses significantly on full body time under tension, which builds
dense lean muscles, especially smaller muscle groups that are not activated even with
free weights. You develop extremely powerful muscle fibers, more so than bodybuilders
in the same weight class, with a perfect balance of strength and endurance through type
I and type II muscle fiber optimization.
• Calisthenics is the advanced school of functional training that solely uses body weight.
But weighted calisthenics (weight vests or weight belts) can be used to build more
strength and progress faster. Calisthenics’ major flaw is the lack of lower body
training since gymnasts and calisthenic athletes optimize for skills towards the
endgame, and heavier legs make skills a lot harder. We can borrow strengths from
calisthenics and counter its weak points.
• The greater the difficulty of an exercise, the higher the return on investment you
get. So to maximize ROI, we have to continuously strive to perform more difficult
moves. “Do not pray for an easy life. Pray for the strength to endure a difficult
one” ~ Bruce Lee
• The peak difficulty of any exercise is usually with Olympic rings, which places muscles
in constant tension, recruiting stabilizing muscles and activating long complete kinetic
chains in the body. Do not try to use these until you’ve built the muscles (especially
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small muscles that even free weights don’t build), tendons, and ligament strengths,
otherwise injury is almost certain
• Functional training dramatically builds and relies on the core (abs), it’s engaged in
almost every exercise, a 6 pack is guaranteed with consistent training.
• Functional training also focuses on the glutes (butt), the largest muscle in the body, and
legs because heavy leg and glute work is the most effective way to boost your
testosterone and growth hormone levels, crucial for building muscle and boosting
metabolism to lose fat. You don’t need heavy weights to achieve this.
• Functional training also focuses significantly on unilateral movements (archer push ups,
Bulgarian split squats, single leg dumbbell deadlifts, single leg bridges etc.) to ensure
no muscle and posture imbalances, a concept borrowed from physio.
• Strong balanced functional kinetic chains developed through functional training is what
brings you max energy when not exercising. Your glutes, core, back, legs, shoulder
blades will have the muscle memory to know how to be engaged when you sit all day,
auto posture correction, minimal energy loss.
You need the concentric phase to trigger overload but muscles don’t tear as much when
shortened and contracted in the concentric phase. After that concentric phase, the eccentric
phase that follows it is a perfect timing window for micro-tears to optimize growth (source 1,
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source 2) since the muscle is lengthening again while still contracted, but it was just under
great load from the concentric phase, so it's going to tear efficiently here. This is how you
save time. You can also just do regular gym bro style too, regular tempo reps, but you'll need
more reps and spend more time. This is what my trainer taught me and it was key to how I got
insanely fast results without working out frequently or for hours each time. If you don’t focus
on the eccentric phase AND you try to optimize to keep on increasing weight, literally
you’re decreasing your progress speed because with higher weight your ability to focus
on the eccentric goes down. This is how the fitness industry keeps you working out
MORE instead of LESS. Time to wake up.
Muscles do not understand math, how many repetitions you do, they only understand time
under tension and resistance level (load) when worked in their full range of motion.
Type II (fast twitch) muscle fibers use more anaerobic respiration and are better for short
bursts of speed and power.
Type II is what my training focuses on for the type of energy and physique built because
building type II will give you more endurance than you’ll ever need, unless you want to run
marathons, but I’m not interested in a marathon runner physique, if you are you should close
this doc.
However, to maximize testosterone, growth hormones, and for cardiovascular benefits, leg and
glute training will primarily be Type I. This is because we stand, walk, and do many things in
our life that benefits from Type I lower body muscle fibers and rarely ever need Type 2 lower
body muscle fibers. We do not need to squat or deadlift 300+ lbs for functional strength
that translate to everyday life and maximum ROI for more energy throughout the day.
Form
• Full range of motion is crucial, it builds full range of motion strength and maximizes
the muscle gains you get from each repetition because of maximum recruitment of large
and small muscles, tendons and ligaments. Hypertrophy research indicates full range of
motion is definitely superior for muscle building.
• This also develops proper posture over time, 2 birds with 1 stone, combining physio
together with muscle building
• The more difficult you make a single rep (safely, proper form), the better, as it recruits
max number of cells (muscles of all sizes, tendons, ligaments) to work for each rep
• Anything you can do to destabilize the body to make the movement more difficult will
create exponential return on effort through max recruitment of cells engaged and central
nervous system stress, leading to compound effects for increasing lean muscle mass
and metabolism for fat burning
• Never try to make any rep easier, no momentum, no compensating using other muscles
you’re not targeting for that exercise, otherwise you’re wasting each second you put into
workouts, waste compounds. Ego is what the fitness industry uses to hold people back
and keep people continuously engaged in inefficient exercises (unless you simply like
lifting heavier weights).
• General good principles for all exercises to prevent injury and activate the correct kinetic
chains: by default keep your core engaged and glutes tight – some exercises you do not
need this but just remember this saying “core tight, glutes engaged” this stabilizes your
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body to activate the right muscles targeted during movements for maximum correct
muscle recruitment, it also automatically protects your back, especially lower back
• If you want to keep your body straight, you need to point your feet, squeeze your legs,
glutes, and abs, full body engagement
Scapula Control
• Reference these definitions when we dive into the form of each exercise but in general
just remember that we want the shoulder to move naturally and avoid unnatural
movements that will risk injury and have suboptimal kinetic chain activation. Luckily
functional training doesn’t have any unnatural movements that gym machines and many
conventional bodybuilding exercises do. However, it’s still important to be conscious of
what your scapula is doing for every exercise.
• For inverted rows (Australian pull ups), protract and outwardly rotate as the arm reaches
forward, then as you pull, retract and inwardly rotate back to the starting position,
squeeze at the end of each movement to build greater scapula strength, which will
make it easier to perform exercises with perfect form as you progress
• For pull ups the scapula should outwardly rotate and elevate as the arms reach upward,
then as you pull, inwardly rotate and depress back to the starting position – a common
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mistake even in the calisthenics community is depressing the scapula in the beginning,
you depress at the end, if done at the start this is going to cause shoulder joint injuries
• Push exercises like pushups: as you go down, the scapula should retract and slightly
inwardly rotate (depending on how wide the hands are placed apart), on the way up, the
scapula should protract and slightly outwardly rotate
• By far the best free content on exercise form fundamentals, physio, injury prevention,
and best of all, injury healing movements that actually work is from Eric Wong’s
precision movement: https://www.youtube.com/user/ericwongmma
Tempo
• As mentioned, because muscles do not understand how many repetitions you do, it only
understands time under tension and resistance level so the tempo of each repetition
matters. Generally good idea to aim for 1-2 sec concentric, hold for 1 sec, then 1-2 sec
eccentric. Very controlled repetitions. Explosive movements (1 or < 1 second
repetitions) is only useful for athletic performance or training for strength not building
muscle. At endgame, when you mainly train for strength or just maintenance you can
adjust so reps are faster.
• You can add an additional 1 sec to each phase: concentric, hold, eccentric for some
sets to mix things up and cause muscle confusion. For example, for lunges or squats
that are high volume, you can train endurance and hypertrophy together in 1 set of 30
reps split into 10 x slow reps, 3 sec in each phase, 10 x regular tempo but 3 sec hold at
isometric phase, then 10 x regular tempo.
• Super slow reps like 10+ seconds spent in each phase is not useful for hypertrophy, this
is proven in the calisthenics community and scientific studies. But it is useful to train for
calisthenics competitions, where you simply want to train to do a movement slowly.
Rest Times
• You rest between sets of exercises to allow the muscle to recover and perform the next
set with max effectiveness
• Use a workout timer because you need consistency to make progress and not train
randomly. Always keep your rest times as perfectly consistent as you can.
• Always rest enough between sets to do another set with very similar number of reps
than the last one (80-100% # reps as last) because as mentioned the goal per workout
is to maximize the number of high-quality reps done in the timebox chosen, nothing else
matters, if you gas out by front loading too many reps in first few sets without enough
rest time, you achieve less volume within the timebox, wasting time.
• Rest times for muscle building is usually 2-3 minutes, 3 minutes for hard compound
movements (pushups), 2 minutes for less taxing exercises, listen to your body,
everyone is at a different level, the same exercise may require more or less rest time for
you, don’t exceed 3 minutes rest time though as a beginner, you shouldn’t be doing
anything that requires more than 3-minute rest times
• 3-5 minute rest times is needed for extremely difficult exercises like unassisted
handstand pushups but these train mostly skills, for fun, not needed for hypertrophy
• Resting too long between sets reduces the efficiency to hit hypertrophy threshold
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• Do not sit or lie down when resting, stand and walk around, keep moving to regulate
blood levels so you don’t tire out fast or get light headed. Walking also helps burn some
calories while you’re resting, might as well.
• For unilateral movements like Bulgarian split squats where you’re training one side per
set, you start timing after your first set on one side ends so you return to that side after
the 3 minutes (or whatever rest window you’re using) is up. For example:
o 00:00 start doing Bulgarian split squats on right leg
o 00:30 finished right leg, start resting right leg while you immediately work the left
side, noting that you should start the right side again at 03:30
o 01:00 finished left leg, start full rest
o 03:30 since you started resting the right leg at 00:30 your rest time is up
o repeat
Breathing
• Muscles require oxygen to perform.
• Breathing must be mastered for high ROI workouts and boosting metabolism by
reducing stress from fight or flight responses, reducing and minimizing cortisol build up
• Compound movements puts a lot of stress on muscles so it’s important to breathe
properly during movements so your muscles have all the resources it needs to perform
each rep effectively to get the most out of every workout. Always breathe consistently,
controlled, and focused. Do not hold breaths during functional training.
• Unlike heavy weight lifting, such as deadlifts and squats, you do not need to hold your
breath to protect your body (mostly back) under extreme load because with functional
training you’ll perform exercises that your body can naturally handle at your level, no
extreme loads with high risk of injury.
• Even when doing static exercises (isometric holds), you should never hold your breath,
always breathe because muscles need oxygen when placed under stress. However, the
difference here is that because muscles are constantly under tension with isometric
holds, you must breathe faster short breaths instead of slow longer breaths.
• In general, for dynamic exercises (any movement that has a concentric and eccentric
phase) breaths should be controlled and not too short and not too long. You should try
to breathe in from your nose as often as possible but always out from your mouth.
Breathing in from your nose might be harder at first with more oxygen hunger but your
body will adapt. Breathing in from your mouth causes more fight or flight response and
stress that affects metabolism and central nervous system stress. There are limited
benefits of breathing in from the mouth but many for breathing in from your nose.
• Sometimes when the movement requires extreme amount of muscle tension, or you’re
just pushing yourself very hard (a great thing), you may need to breathe in from the
mouth, but still very controlled, by manipulating the airway using your tongue and teeth
• Breathing out should always be done with your mouth because when breathing out it is
much easier to control the pace using how wide your mouth opens. Use your tongue
and teeth for airway control
• When giving it your all, often you’ll naturally grunt as you exhale through your mouth
• Inhale on the eccentric phase and exhale during the concentric phase. To remember
this, just think when you need to summon the most power (concentric phase) you
release your breath like blowing off steam from your engine and when you perform the
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eccentric phase on the way back to neutral position, you gather energy for the next rep
by breathing in.
• Breathing slowly helps you focus on mind muscle connection but most importantly it
regulates blood pressure so you don’t get light headed and pass out.
• Breathe using your stomach for most of the breath. It’s ok if the last part of the breath
uses the chest but the more you use your chest to breathe, the shorter the breath, and
you’ll gas out faster and likely feel lightheaded too.
• Breathing properly trains your body to use oxygen more effectively during workouts and
24/7. This also allows you to progress faster by increasing volume per workout over
time. Most importantly, it trains your body to subconsciously breathe properly all the
time, reducing fight or flight stress which boosts metabolism and improves recovery,
more gains short and long term.
• Focus on good breathing during rest periods between sets.
• When you breathe correctly, working out kills 2 birds with 1 stone by actually reducing
stress and anxiety in the body and achieves similar benefits as breathing meditations to
reduce fight or flight responses in the central nervous system, which boosts metabolism
and is key to getting you results long term.
o The more days you work out effectively, the faster you’ll get results via volume,
assuming you’re recovering optimally.
• Time of day:
• Cardio will increase your appetite and make it easy to overeat due to both
physiological and psychological feedback loops.
• Our ancestors did not do cardio for fun, they conserved energy and only used it for
when they really needed it.
• Cardio should be treated as for fun or to build…well cardiovascular performance, for
heart health. However, science concluded that the difference for life expectancy
between a world class cardio performance athlete vs a regularly active person is almost
nonexistent. Best to treat cardio as activities you do for fun while focusing on the rest.
• Cardio will burn calories. We’ll talk about that later in detail but you don’t need cardio to
be 6 pack lean easily as long as your body is processing food optimally and using
energy optimally. My fastest fat burning personal protocol does not use cardio
beyond 60 min of walking outside per day. This is the same approach used by elite
trainers I trust.
• HITT (high intensity interval training) will decrease optimal muscle gain and
maintenance. Whenever the central nervous system is taxed and muscles are used
anaerobically, besides resistance training, there is always a chance of losing muscle
AND it will 100% definitely impede recovery needed to maintain or gain more muscle. I
do HITT type of activities knowing this but only if it’s fun to me. Done consciously. Not
done to burn fat like the internet says. Trust science and actual coaches with enough
real experience. My optimal fat burning state requires no HITT to maximize
recovery, optimize hormones, and minimize stress.
• Even aerobic cardio like cycling eats into the same recovery your body needs (cardio
and weightlifting are made up by humans, the body just wants to recover). Doing cardio
makes it much harder to know how much more to eat and rest to match the cardio done
so unless you have cardio consistently into your routine and you can adjust your food
and recovery protocols to handle it, I advise against it unless it’s activities you’re doing
for fun since life > fitness.
• If your body has so many issues that are not addressed, you may want to use cardio to
speed up fat loss, but it’s diminishing returns, what you actually should focus on is not
cardio, you should focus on making your body be at its proper state first, where it will
burn fat extremely efficiently. Apply the pareto principle aka 80/20 rule.
• Doing cardio will decrease your performance when you actually need it for the
highest ROI workouts.
• Functional training will automatically increase your cardiovascular performance due to
the focus on time under tension, proper breathing, and mixed exercises that train both
anaerobic and aerobic performance. Highest ROI.
• More specifically when I do leg days, I use compound movements with high volume to
tax the cardiovascular system significantly and trigger body responses that gets
superior fat burning results than cardio due to metabolic stress for days afterwards
• After your body is at its primal optimal state, you can use cardio strategically to eat more
food during feasts, after diet breaks, or for hitting goals you want faster via mini-cuts.
• Cardio (besides walking) will definitely counter muscle building and will not help you
reach your ideal primal state where you’re burning fat 24/7 at a maximum rate. It’s the
hours in the day where you’re not active that actually matter, NOT the time you’re
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active. That’s why the best cardio athletes don’t look strong, don’t even look fit, but their
hearts are extremely large and pump oxygen significantly more efficiently than regular
humans because they optimized for it. If that’s your goal, please close this guide.
• The only cardio optimal to maximize fat burning 24/7 is walking.
Recovery
Muscles are built when the body is resting so maximize recovery for highest ROI by
controlling: sleep, nutrition (macro and micro-nutrient optimization), supplements, full rest days,
stress, hormones, metabolism and central nervous system optimization. I will dive into these in
detail within 2021 in the guide and on YouTube.
Sleep is when hormones that burn fat, build muscles, regulate how food is processed,
etc. are produced. One of the easiest ways to boost results fast is to improve sleep quality.
Undertraining
Undertraining depends on your goal. I’m going to assume you want lose fat and build muscle.
So you will need to maximize volume. So there are 2 ways you could be under training:
Worst Undertraining:
• Undertraining per workout, wasting the workout: if you’re not reaching hypertrophy, your
workout is wasted.
2nd Worst Undertraining:
• Undertraining per week, not maximizing volume and taking advantage of the full
recovery windows you have in the week.
The only real way to know if you’re undertraining or not is to push yourself given the time you
allocate to working out and find the threshold of when you’re overtraining and then reduce
volume until you feel it’s right.
Overtraining
For anyone into fitness, they will most likely overtrain and not undertrain. They will likely be
undereating too out of fear of gaining fat, which causes more overtraining. This is just an
unfortunate reality achieved by the fitness industry as they maximize engagement and reach in
their genius marketing.
You don’t make progress when working out. Working out is a stimulus that triggers body
changes. You make progress during the hours you’re NOT working out.
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Overtraining essentially adds a ton of inflammation and stress in the body, so the signs of
overtraining are very similar to being in a stressful life situation. It’s the same fight or flight
response being triggered plus some other symptoms.
Signs of overtraining:
• Whatever physical signs you normally feel when stressed out in general, uniquely for
you (everyone has different signs)
• Sleep quality drops, waking up early or can’t fall asleep
• Faster heart beat
• Light headedness
• Sore or stiff joints
• Feeling physically or mentally drained
• Not able to workout as hard as usual
• Walking or regular activities feel harder than usual
Overtraining tends to cause electrolyte deficiencies like sodium, potassium, magnesium etc.
Check with a doctor or simply eat more food to replenish electrolytes to test and see if it’s any
of these.
If you notice you’ve definitely been overtraining, the best thing you should do is de-load for 1-2
weeks, meaning cut back on all strength training, either reduce time (less sets) or intensity
(lower difficulty), maybe even eat more. You’ll have to assess and test for yourself but you
definitely need to help the body recover and reduce the stress placed on yourself, otherwise
you’re just impeding progress short and long term.
Injury Prevention
• No exercise is supposed to cause pain during the exercise, if there is pain, the form is
wrong.
• A single injury can set you back significantly.
• To prevent injuries to joints, ligaments, tendons, and muscles:
o Must understand the proper form for each exercise and not do any exercise
unless you really understand the proper form + do proper stretches per type of
exercise performed before each workout.
o Progress gradually using progressive forms to do exercises too difficult for your
level vs doing the end form right away.
o Don’t overdo isometrics like plank hold, combine with dynamic exercises that
have concentric and eccentric phases.
o Master scapula control
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• Science and experience show 12-16 sets / workout is ideal for muscle growth, assuming
proper form
• No need to track workouts, reps, sets etc, I never do because I don’t live for fitness and
keep a strict lifestyle. My life doesn’t optimize for fitness and has a lot of variety,
different things happened that week, that day etc, how you perform a rep will not be the
same every time you work out
• Frontload the hardest exercise and the hardest form of that exercise first that you
can do. As you tire out in the workout window, reduce difficulty either by going to
an easier variation of the exercise (for example feet planted in the inverted row) or
changing exercises or using assistance like from a resistance band. For example for
dips, you could wrap a light resistance band and support your feet with it to make it
easier. Remember we are optimizing for max volume of work done. Always test to see if
you can do another set targeting the muscle group you’re focusing on. For example, say
after 2 sets of single leg ground assisted pullups you cannot do 1 more set with proper
form, then try to do 1 more set using the easier form with both feet on the ground.
Goal 2: Train your muscle endurance until you can do 40-minute workouts with a single
muscle group
• When starting out you probably cannot do 40-minute workouts focusing on a single
muscle group like the Phase 2: build routine’s push, pull, abs, legs routine
• First decide which muscle group you want to prioritize
• Then progressively do more sets using that muscle group in your workouts by
swapping out other exercise sets. For example:
o Assuming you’re doing an easier full body split in the beginning such as the
Phase 1: foundations routine.
o Say you want to focus on chest, triceps, shoulders, so you would do as many
more set of an exercise targeting those areas as possible, such as pushups and
pike pushups. You swap out exercises sets not targeting your focus area (swap
out sets of legs, or abs, or back) so you can keep the same workout timing
window you decided for yourself (remember over 60 minutes is diminishing
returns, 30-45 min will get your extraordinary results with consistency if you’re
applying all principles correctly)
• You can decide what kind of physique you want to build and the order your muscles
develop by controlling how you prioritize the progressions, for example:
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o You can focus on just doing more pushups and pike pushups each workout
sessions to train incredible push endurance (bigger and stronger shoulders,
triceps, chest) and basically go all out focusing on progressing to a 40 minute
push day like the Phase 2: build routine’s push day – this is the fastest way to
progress if you’re not working out very often, say only 2-3 times a week
o Or you can choose to focus on total body endurance, so you alternate the muscle
group focused on to build endurance more frequently. This method is the
slower way to progress if you’re only working out 2-3 times a week but it
can be extremely effective if you’re working out 5-6 times a week. You could
focus on shoulders, triceps, chest by doing more push exercise sets on one day
of your workout. At the next workout, you would switch the focus to back and do
more sets of pull exercises like the inverted row and ground assisted pullups.
Goal 3: Prioritize recovery because recovery is how you change your body, not when you’re
actually working out. Working out is only the input that triggers the actual response we want to
generate.
• Do not over train
• Rest properly between sets, rest enough that you can do at least 80% of the previous
set’s reps. Enjoy that time and actually let your body rest vs feeling anxious and wanting
to do more work. This is key for long term results and totally body stress reduction and
central nervous system optimization.
• Let a single muscle group recover before training it again. Unless you simply like
working out everyday and you’ve tweaked your routine in a way where you can recover
within 24 hours, you should not train that muscle the day or two after working it. I usually
leave at least 48 hours before training that muscle again.
• For example: if you did many push exercises one day, don’t do push exercises using
the same muscles until they are no longer sore.
• Everyone’s recovery ability will differ depending on your body and stage you’re at, listen
to your body. You might need longer than 48 hours.
Auto Regulation
This is just a fancy term for learning how to be attuned to your body and listen to what it’s
telling you by knowing what signals to be aware of and what to do when you see them.
Guidance below:
• Make ONE change at a time, otherwise you won’t know what’s working and what’s not.
The only exception is if you got a thorough analysis from a coach or someone who
knows what they’re talking about and they gave you a concrete plan.
• Give it at least 1 week to make a judgement on a change just like A/B testing, you need
to reach statistical significance. Your body usually needs 1-2 weeks to respond.
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• If you don’t feel motivated to exercise then something is wrong. Debug to find out why.
Is it a lack of energy or lack of will power or is your workouts producing a physical or
emotional response that’s negative?
o If it’s lack of energy
▪ Did you eat within 1 hour of working out? If not, it might be because your
body needs energy to fuel the workout
▪ If you’re in a caloric deficit, you might be going too low, try eating a bit
more that week
▪ If you’ve been working out the day before, it might be time for a full rest
day and reassess if you’re working out too often during the week to have
enough recovery
o If it’s not lack of energy but just willpower, reassess your life goals. Workouts
must be positively reenforcing your lifestyle’s feedback loop. Adjust whatever you
must to want to work out.
• After performing a set of an exercise and having rested, if on the next set you’re not
able to reach 80% of the number of reps in the last set, it means either you’re not
resting long enough to give your muscles enough time to recover in between sets OR
you’re overloading your muscles too fast early on in the workout, possibly done by
performing too many reps very fast instead of slow and controlled reps focused on time
under tension. Remember the only thing that matter is volume of work (time under
tension + resistance level) done in a workout session, that’s what we optimize for.
• If you feel light headed, stop working out, go eat something with high glycemic index.
You can eat refined carbohydrates or fast digesting fruit like bananas so you get sugar
asap to fuel the workout. If you’re still lightheaded after eating, stop the workout.
• If an exercise hurts, stop, something is wrong, most likely the form is incorrect. No
exercise should cause pain.
• If you no longer find exercises challenging, it’s time to increase the difficulty to progress
further and shock the body to respond again to avoid hitting plateaus. I did this by
introducing Olympic rings, and then a weight vest.
• If you want to train for muscle mass and you can’t perform an exercise with at least 6
reps, then it’s too difficult for you. Decrease the difficulty of the exercise somehow,
either using lever, dropping weight, using aids like resistance bands to help counter
gravity, etc
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Upcoming
All guides will be FREE and accessible via www.jonzhao.com
New guides:
1. Metabolism control and mastery
2. Hacks to eat insane amount of calories and not get fat
3. Psychology hack to easily stay lean forever
Drop a comment on my latest YouTube video if you want to see something specific. I read
every comment.
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Work in Progress
Advanced Exercises
(coming later)
Push Exercises
Archer Pushups
Pseudo Planch Pushups
Wall handstand pushups
Wall handstand pushups face against wall
Pull Exercises
Reverse Flys with Rings
Pull-ups on Rings
Chin-ups on Rings
Commando Pull-ups on Rings
Leg Exercises
Single Leg Dumbbell Deadlifts
Ab Exercises
Leg Raise to Hip Level + Side to Side
Leg Raise to Chest Level + Side to Side
L Sit
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Nutrition, Metabolic
Control and Mastery
• Calories
o Law of thermodynamics
• Hormones
• Muscles and Strength Training
• Sugar
• Fiber
• Gut bacteria
• Macronutrients
• Vegetables
• Appetite
• Sleep