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The Iron Age Principles of Old-school Strength
Episode 85
Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
Summary
Jon Bond discusses the principles of strength training from the Iron Age, emphasising simplicity, consistency, and the importance of foundational exercises. He highlights the benefits of training the body as a connected system, the value of progressive overload, and the significance of maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Jon Bond also reflects on the evolution of strength training, women's attitudes to strength, and the importance of training for life rather than short-term goals.
Takeaways
- The Iron Age principles of strength emphasise simplicity and consistency.
- Modern training often overcomplicates with unnecessary variety.
- Training the body as a connected system is more effective.
- Progressive overload is key to sustainable strength gains.
- Women have increasingly embraced strength training.
- Training should be a lifelong commitment, not a short-term goal.
- Foundational exercises like squats and deadlifts remain pivotal.
- Quality over quantity in training leads to better results.
- Grip strength is a good marker of overall strength.
- Old school lifters focused on sustainable progress.