Stronger After 50: The Secret is Simpler Than You Think

Getting strong and staying strong becomes more important the older we get, and the secret is not complicated. Starting Strength Coach Phil Meggers explains.

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You’re Probably Warming Up Wrong, and It’s Ruining Your Lifting

Warming up badly is inefficient, sometimes ridiculous, and it sets you up for poor results from your lifting. Starting Strength Coach Phil Meggers helps you warm-up effectively, efficiently, and simply and provides plenty of examples, tips, and mistakes to avoid.

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You've Been Unloading Your Barbell Wrong This Whole Time (plus bonus tip)

You’re done lifting - you’ve finished your deadlifts, snatches, cleans, rows, whatever was on the docket for the day - you’ve got a bunch of bumper plates on the barbell, and you’ve got to unload them.

It’s a bit of a pain, of course, and you don’t want to work any harder than you have to, so let’s cover how to make your life easier when unloading your bar (and read to the end for a bonus tip).

You can also watch the video below to see these steps in action.

Step 1: Get all the metal plates or “change plates” off the bar.
Take care of the smaller plates first. If it’s not a full-sized plate (i.e., a bumper plate or a metal 45 lb plate), it’s easy to slide off since it’s not sitting on the floor, so get these plates off first.

Step 2: Outer Plates Off
Move to one side of the bar and roll the innermost plate up onto a small, change plate (a 2.5 lb plate works well). Doing this raises that entire side of the barbell up just enough that you can easily slide off any other plates on that side of the bar (Figure 1).

Figure 1

Step 3: Inner Plate Off
On the same side of the bar, you now have one remaining plate (i.e., the plate that you rolled up onto the 2.5 lb plate in Step 2). This is the only plate that requires a little work to remove. You can pick up the bar with one hand and slide the plate off with the other hand (Figure 2), or your can move to the outside of the barbell and use both hands to pull that last plate toward you.

figure 2

Note: Don’t let that end of the barbell simply drop jarringly to the floor when that last plate comes off. Be kind to your barbell.

Step 4: The Best Part
Grab the empty end of the barbell, walk it up (Figure 3) until the barbell is completely vertical, and then simply pick up the barbell as it slides up and out of the stack of plates now resting on the floor. At this point, you can store your barbell and then easily put away that stack of plates.

figure 3

Bonus Tip:
When getting your barbell out (or when putting it away), if you’d like to conserve some energy, don’t carry it in your hands. Pick it up, place it on one shoulder (one end will counterweight the other end, so this is a pretty easy process), and then carry it over to your squat rack.

figure 4

Since the bar is already on your shoulder, it’s at roughly the same height as your j-hooks (if you’re set up to squat or press), which means you can lean against the squat rack to make sure the barbell is against the uprights (Figure 4) and then just dip slightly until the bar is resting in the hooks.

Note: If there are other people around, make sure you don’t clock someone in the face when carrying it at this height.

As always, we hope this helps you get stronger and live better.

-Phil

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How to Breathe and Brace Correctly When Lifting Heavy | Valsalva Maneuver

Breathing, Valsalva, getting tight, bearing down, bracing?! Learn how & when to breathe and get tight for each individual lift. It's not complicated, but new and experienced lifters get this wrong frequently, so let's fix it. Starting Strength Coach Phil Meggers explains.

(A Blast from the Past video originally published on 11/21/22)

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If the Bar is Moving, You Shouldn't Be Doing This

We humans like to complicate things. Complication is cool. Complication is interesting. Complication is sexy.

Complication is also - very often - stupid.

Complicated breathing when lifting is such a case. Old 80s and 90s fitness magazines would have you “inhale on the way down and exhale on the way up,” and although this silly nonsense is far less prevalent than it used to be, this advice is still all too common (YouTube comments provide solid evidence of this).

Your Body Knows the Truth
Your body already knows this type of breathing is stupid. You don’t breathe this way when performing any short-term, hard physical endeavor.

Trying to push a stuck car? You hold your breath.

Constipated? You hold your breath.

You hold your breath because breath is support and stability, and these things are important when trying to do something physically hard.

When lifting weights, take a similar approach and remember this rule . . .

If the bar is moving, you’re not breathing.

Keep It Simple
When lifting, simply take a breath before the rep starts, hold it by tightly contracting every muscle in your trunk (don’t say “core”), perform the rep while holding your breath and tightly contracted muscles, then release your breath after you return to the starting position.

In practice, this is what it looks like for a few lifts:

Squat
Breathe in at the top, hold your breath while squatting down and back up again, then release your breath.

Bench Press
Breathe in at the top, hold your breath while lowering the barbell to your chest and pressing it back up again, then release your breath.

Press
Breathe in at the bottom (when the bar is resting below chin height), press the bar to lockout, lower the bar back to the starting position, then release your breath.

Deadlift
Breathe in at the bottom (when the weight is on the floor), drag the bar up your legs to lockout, set the bar down again, then release your breath.

(Every time you release your breath at the top of your deadlift, a small, cute puppy dies. Knock that garbage off.)

Keep it simple. Inhale, perform the rep, then exhale.

If the bar is moving, you’re not breathing.

As always, we hope this helps you get stronger and live better.

-Phil

PS: Whenever you want even more Testify in your life, here are some free resources:

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At Testify, we offer small group training, private coaching (in-person or remotely via Zoom), online coaching, and form checks. Interested in getting stronger, looking better, and having more energy?

Motivation is for Suckers

(A Blast from the Past article originally posted on 04/14/23)

Motivation is for fools. Motivation is for wieners. Don’t trust your motivation.

People far more eloquent and well-known than me - admittedly a rather low bar in both cases - have said some version of this sentiment, but if you’ve never seen or heard it, it’s important that you do so today: Motivation is for suckers.

We are all fools and suckers at various times in our lives - I’ve certainly been both of those on more occasions than I care to admit - but when it comes to training, you’ve got to know that you do not trust motivation.

Instead, trust habit. Trust discipline. Trust delayed gratification. These are all various ways of saying essentially the same thing. Go in and simply punch the clock on a regular basis.

99% of the time, training is exactly that - going in and punching the clock. Sure, you’ll have days where you’re jazzed up to train, but you’re going to have a ton of days where you don’t particularly want to touch a barbell, and this is especially true the longer you’ve trained. PRs get harder to come by over time - after all, the stronger you get, the harder it is to get even stronger.

Punch the clock anyway. You have permission from me - for all that matters - to not want to train . . . and still go and train anyway. All those workouts where you’re excited to get in the gym and train? In the long run, those aren’t the difference makers - those aren’t the ones where you make the most progress. But the workouts where you didn’t feel like going to the gym and went anyway? Those are your moneymakers. You keep stringing those days together, and over time, that’s how you make progress. Being consistent. Punching the clock.

Are you stoked to brush your teeth? Probably not, but you do it anyway. On the days that you’re not motivated to get to the gym, treat your training the same way.

It’s ok to not be motivated and still train. Training isn’t life, but it makes the quality of the rest of your life better. Get to work. Punch that clock.

As always, we hope this helps you get stronger and live better.

-Phil

PS: Whenever you want even more Testify in your life, here are some free resources:

  • Book a free intro and strategy session with us HERE.

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  • Get our free weekly email - containing useful videos, articles, and training tips - HERE.

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(Some links may be affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, Testify earns from qualifying purchases.)


At Testify, we offer small group training, private coaching (in-person or remotely via Zoom), online coaching, and form checks. Interested in getting stronger, looking better, and having more energy?