LIFT MORE WEIGHT: 10 Simple & Quick Training Tips (Starting Strength Coach Explains)

Coming at you rapidfire – 10 things you need to know, do, or have before lifting heavy. Here we go.

1. Valsalva Maneuver
Before you start your rep, take a breath, hold that breath against a closed glottis (i.e., not against your lips), tighten every muscle in your trunk like you expect to get punched, and stay that rigid until the rep is over.

None of this “breathe in on the way down and breathe out on the way up” garbage.

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

If you’re not sure how to correctly hold your breath against a closed glottis, check out the video below.

2. Focal Point
Have one.

Your focal point will vary by lift, but it should not vary during the lift. Stare at that point before the rep, during the rep, and between each rep.

Check out the video below for the correct focal point for several of the major lifts.

3. Midfoot Balance
For each of the lifts except the bench press, you want to be balanced on the middle of your foot. Put another way, your weight should be evenly distributed throughout your entire foot.

It’s easy to accidentally have more of your weight on the balls of your feet (i.e., your balance is forward) or on your heels (i.e., your balance is backward) than you should without realizing it, so pay attention to where you feel your weight in your feet.

4. Plan of Attack
Don’t think about how heavy the weight is. Don’t hope you’re going to get that lift.

Instead, have one cue in your head before the lift starts and focus only on that cue. Execute that cue.

5. Chalk
You have to have it, and you have to use it.

You will probably need to bring your own chalk (regular or liquid if you’re really sneaky) if you train at a commercial gym, but this is normal for people who care about their training, and my guess is that includes you.

If you don’t use chalk, it will be the cause of missed lifts, missed strength progress, and you might not ever even realize why.

Be a person. Use chalk.

6. Personal Gear - Belt and Lifting Shoes
Buy yourself a pair of lifting shoes. Next, get yourself a quality leather lifting belt and learn to use it (check out the video below).

There are people out there who will argue, “I wasn’t born with a belt, and I wasn’t born with lifting shoes, so I don’t think I should use them. It’s not natural.”

True, but we weren’t born with a barbell, either (or clothes, for that matter). A barbell is not natural, but it’s a very useful tool to get stronger, and the same logic applies to lifting shoes and lifting belts.

Don’t buy Chuck Taylors. They are not lifting shoes. They are squishy hipster shoes for people who started to think about lifting shoes but never completed the thought. They have enough cushioning to be perfectly comfortable for walking and everyday wear, and that cushioning tells us that they are a silly choice for lifting.

7. Collars
On every lift except the bench press, use collars (the olympic lifts are a separate topic for another day). I’d recommend not using collars on the bench press since - on the chance that you don’t have spotters and forgot to set the safeties at the correct height, you might be able to save yourself from disaster by dumping the plates off the bar (i.e., side-to-side) during a failed lift.

Especially for the squat and press, collars are critically important. Disasters can, have, and do happen with lifters who don’t use collars.

Don’t want to use collars for your warm-ups? I understand . . . it takes a phenomenal amount of energy and willpower to put on some collars. With this in mind, here’s a good rule of thumb: if the weight is heavy enough to use a belt, it’s heavy to use collars, too.

If you use a belt for all of your sets or, conversely, you never use a belt, then a good rule of thumb is: use collars for your last warm-up and all of your work sets.

You might think I recommend collars because I care about you.

No.

I care about the people around you, and they are the people who get hurt when a plate (or plates) slides off the bar, the bar cartwheels in the opposite direction, and plates are flung across the room (I also care about the equipment that gets damaged in the process).

Yes, I’ve seen it happen. Multiple times. It’s nasty and scary.

Be a person. Use collars.

8. Training Log
Get a notebook and keep a training log religiously. This is your most important piece of training gear.

You can find another bar, you switch squat racks, and you can buy another pair of lifting shoes, but your training log is personal to you.

It has your history, which means it helps guide you forward and make intelligent decisions. The training log separates training from exercise.

9. Keep It Simple
Like many endeavors, lifting weights is not about doing a bunch of complicated movements.

It’s about doing a few simple movements rather well and with consistency.

You probably don’t need a cue designed specifically for you. You simply need to execute the one you’re already thinking about.

10. Check Your Bar
If you lift long enough (and it doesn’t take long), you’ve made the mistake of a misloaded barbell. You’ll make this mistake multiple times in your training career, but you can minimize the number of mistakes by remembering three things . . .

First, check your bar vs your book. Does what you have on the bar match what’s planned for today in your book?

Second, check your bar math. You meant to load 165 lb, so do a last second check to make sure it’s 165 lb and not 155 lb (you might have forgotten to put on that 5 lb plate on each side).

Third, check your bar symmetry. Do the plates on the left side of the barbell match those on the right side? It’s easy to load one side correctly, then get briefly distracted and forget to finish loading the other side.

As always, I 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.

  • Pick up a free copy of Testify’s Squat Guide: 12 Tips to Improve Your Squat Now HERE.

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

  • Follow Testify on Instagram HERE.

  • Subscribe to Testify’s YouTube channel HERE.

(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?

The TRUTH About Lifting (What No One Tells You!)

Starting Strength Coach Phil Meggers briefly covers why lifting weights is pretty stupid and - more importantly - why it isn't.

(A Blast from the Past video originally published on 04/24/23)

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

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

  • Pick up a free copy of Testify’s Squat Guide: 12 Tips to Improve Your Squat Now HERE.

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

  • Follow Testify on Instagram HERE.

  • Subscribe to Testify’s YouTube channel HERE.


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?

The Best Training Advice That Nobody Thinks to Use

Thinking about skipping another training session?

Worried about how that heavy set of squats is going to go?

Considering shutting down your deadlift set after two reps instead of finishing all five?

You already possess an outstanding source of training advice - you just haven’t used it.

In situations like these, ask yourself one question:

“What would I tell my kids?”

I often refer to this as “kid talk,” and it’s both clarifying and compelling.

(Of course, you don’t need to actually have children for this to work. Picture a conversation with your niece or nephew, or imagine that you do have kids.)

“Dad, can I skip basketball practice today?” your son asks.

“No,” you respond. “You signed up, so you’re committed. This is how you build perseverance and discipline. Let’s go.”

“Mom - I’m scared I’ll forget my lines and mess up on stage,” your daughter says.

“I get it, kiddo, and that worry is normal. But you’ve rehearsed for weeks, and you know your part backward and forward - you’re going to knock their socks off tonight.”

You give your kids the truth, and you expect them to act accordingly.

Solid. Now treat yourself the same way.

Don’t complicate this - and don’t dodge it.

The next time you’re thinking about bailing on a session or a set, just ask yourself, “What would I tell my kids?”

You’ll know what to do.

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.

  • Pick up a free copy of Testify’s Squat Guide: 12 Tips to Improve Your Squat Now HERE.

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

  • Follow Testify on Instagram HERE.

  • Subscribe to Testify’s YouTube channel HERE.

(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?

Can One Simple Tool Really Prevent Weakness in Seniors?

Can one simple tool really help prevent weakness and frailty as we age? Starting Strength Coach Phil Meggers explains what that tool is and why it's so powerful.

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

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

  • Pick up a free copy of Testify’s Squat Guide: 12 Tips to Improve Your Squat Now HERE.

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

  • Follow Testify on Instagram HERE.

  • Subscribe to Testify’s YouTube channel HERE.


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?

8 Unavoidable Truths About Seniors and Lifting Weights…

Bad advice wastes time and holds people back. Starting Strength Coach Phil Meggers covers eight unavoidable truths about seniors and lifting weights so you don’t fall for the same myths twice.

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

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

  • Pick up a free copy of Testify’s Squat Guide: 12 Tips to Improve Your Squat Now HERE.

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

  • Follow Testify on Instagram HERE.

  • Subscribe to Testify’s YouTube channel HERE.


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?

What "Internet Fitness" and "Trainers" Get Wrong About Lifting Weights

We get some good questions in the comment sections of our YouTube videos, and recently, one of them was (paraphrased), “In the squat, should I be using my quads on the way up? Should I be feeling my quads when I squat?”

This question boils down to an even more basic - and important - question that covers all of the barbell lifts, and that is, “Should I be cueing and/or thinking about my muscles when performing a lift?”

(If you’d rather watch a video on this topic, check out the short one below.)

Movements - Not Muscles
In short, no - you don’t think about your muscles when lifting weights. You think about movements - not muscles.

If you’re shooting a basketball, you don’t cue muscle groups since that would be ridiculous. You’re ready to shoot, you’re elevating, and your train of thought goes to “. . . glutes-hamstrings-quads-gastrocs-flexor-carpi-radialis-flexor-carpi-ulnaris-palmaris-longus!”

Again, ridiculous. There is simply too much going on and thinking about individual muscle groups will only slow things down and make the movement more difficult. Instead, you think about a specific movement, and the muscles “come along for the ride,” in a manner of speaking.

This is true in sports, in general movement, and it’s certainly true in lifting.

In the squat, you cue yourself to “drive your hips upward,” and as you drive your hips upward, your knees gradually straighten, which means your quads are doing their job (i.e., the job of knee extension).

In the deadlift, cue “push the floor away.”

In the press, cue “reach with the hips.”

In general, cue movements - not muscles, and you get the muscles automatically since they create the movement.

Any Exceptions?
To almost every rule, there is an exception, and we see that with the “cue-movements-not-muscles” guideline as well.

We generally cue movement, but when we are trying to prevent movement, cueing a muscle group can indeed be effective. For example, tell yourself to “flex your bicep,” and you’ll immediately lock your elbow into a frozen, flexed position, and thus, you are preventing movement. Here are some other examples:

In the press, you reach forward with your hips, but you don’t want your knees to bend (since we’re not performing a push press), so you might cue “tight quads” or “flex your quads.”

In the squat or deadlift, as you prepare to get tight and brace, you take a big breath, perform your Valsalva, and then cue “tight abs” to help transform your wiggly column of vertebrae into one long, rigid, steel beam.

In summary, if you’re specifically trying to prevent movement, you might find cueing a muscle group to be quite useful, but other than that, you want to cue movements rather than muscles.

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.

  • Pick up a free copy of Testify’s Squat Guide: 12 Tips to Improve Your Squat Now HERE.

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

  • Follow Testify on Instagram HERE.

  • Subscribe to Testify’s YouTube channel HERE.

(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?