KneesOverToesGuy Profile picture
Jan 10 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
🧵 How to Be Athletic For Your 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, and 70s, with Example of Each Age…
(X usually fails to upload my threads, so I wrote this all out beforehand, and I’m posting it one by one. My apologies. Thank you for your patience…)
30s

Me

Reached my 20s having never grabbed the rim.

Long list of knee problems.

Had always followed the exercise advice I was given:

“No knee over toes, and no full range of motion.”
Thanks to Charles Poliquin, who helped athletes win 26 Olympic gold medals across a variety of sports, I became OBSESSED with knee over toes and full range of motion.

Now they’re my greatest strengths, and I’ve been living my 30s as a great athlete.
Also 30s

My wife had to give up figure skating in her teens due to ankle problems.

I had shin and ankle problems of my own. When I saw my knees could be solved, I became obsessed with ankles, too.

It’s priceless to now be able to help her.
She’s 35 and has more knee and ankle ability than when she was a teenager!
40s

Stefan Holm

Olympic gold high jumper

What’s of particular note is that he was able to compete more often without injury than any high jumper ever.

And he was “unusual” in that he trained full range of motion.

And he still does.

And he’s still crazy bouncy in his 40s! Image
Also 40s

@Mr1nf1n1ty1

He’s been my training partner for the better part of my 13+ year journey with these subjects.

He’s 45, and sets the example I want for my 40s.
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 50s

There’s only one man under 6 foot tall and DUNKING…

Kadour Ziani!
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 Kadour told me he never believed the advice of no knee over toes and no full range of motion.

Instead, he embraces ability for his entire body, rather than limiting it.

@Kadour_ziani Image
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani 60s

I started training my mom in 2018 when she was 64.

Her hips were becoming a major problem.

I used the exact same system, but at her level.
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani Now she’s flying!

Her mobility with my kids is incredible.

She’s a SuperGrandma.

It’s painful to watch how the bodies of other grandparents are deteriorating.

It doesn’t have to be that way. At least, not as broadly as it is when we limit the body.
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani 70s

George Hackenschmidt was 74 when this picture was taken.

He reportedly could jump over chairs all the way to his mid-80s when he moved on. Image
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani George is one of the all-time great knee over toes and full range of motion pioneers.

His favorite exercise was holding weights behind his back and squatting all the way down while balancing on his toes! Image
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani Conclusion:

Full range of motion has been suppressed for millions of people.

It felt like a duty to share what I learned, so I dedicated my career to this.

But I do NOT put down any form of exercise.

I support the WHOLE range, and ANY exercise you enjoy.
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani If you’d like to see broad medical data supporting this, check out:

But what’s been missing the whole time is:

REGRESSION

Rather than avoiding ability, I seek to figure out how to exercise it at a level that feels good for you. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23821469/
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani Life ain’t supposed to be magic and rainbows.

But it ain’t supposed to be an epidemic of joint replacements and painkillers either.

You CAN be athletic for your age, as you age.

And that can feel pretty magical.
@Mr1nf1n1ty1 @Kadour_ziani Maybe your greatest limitation now, is where you have the most potential.

Yours in Solutions,
Ben

Coaching:
Equipment:
Foot-Shaped Shoes: ATGonlinecoaching.com
ATGequipment.com
UncivilizedSneaker.com

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with KneesOverToesGuy

KneesOverToesGuy Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @kneesovertoesg

Jan 12
If you work from a desk, these 3 exercises can help your shoulders and upper back.

A thread… Image
1. Band Pullapart

This is a common one, and for good reason!

It’s simple!

It’s accessible!

You can do it for high reps and get great circulation, while getting stronger between your shoulder blades!

Try 20 reps with good control.

Closer on the band = tougher
Wider = easier
Looking long-term, I’m very passionate about the next one:

2. Full Range Push-up

Don’t work through pain.

Start on your knees if needed.

Now EMBRACE the stretch.

Feels incredible over time.

This is usually missing from the deskworker routine, and has great potential.
Read 6 tweets
Jan 6
🧵 6 Steps to Find Your True Athletic Potential

Most of us go through life without realizing how athletic and resilient our bodies can be.

My goal with this thread is to make it SIMPLER for you.

(And these same 6 concepts are clues for longevity breakthroughs!)
[X has been posting my threads out of order, so I wrote out this whole thread, and now I’m posting it one by one to be safe…]
1/6 Calf raises aren’t a revelation.

That being said, strength “from the ground up” is usually underdeveloped relative to the rest of the body, and therefore worth mentioning.

It’s also key for context in relation to Part 2…
Read 14 tweets
Jan 5
The most recognition I’ve received is from helping people regain physical joys:

From reviving NFL careers, to helping Joe Rogan get back to martial arts better than he thought he could…

Here’s a breakdown of the # 1 thing I do differently vs the norm, and how you can, too… 🧵 Image
I will use an NFL client as an example:

He was injured.

Then cut.

Then told his rehab wouldn’t be done till after the next season.

His career was presumed to be over…

He dropped the fancy facility, and gave me a shot.

He became a STARTER that season…
Rather than doing the traditional exercises to “train the muscles and avoid the joints” - we built FROM THE INSIDE out, directly opposite of what is broadly taught.

We built tremendous abilities in nooks and crannies which he had never trained before… Image
Read 8 tweets
Jan 4
🧵 History Lesson: George Hackenschmidt

George was able to jump over chairs 50 times, in his mid-80s.

He’s perhaps the greatest jump longevity case ever.

What did he do so differently from the norm?

A thread…

[He was 74 in this picture.] Image
George’s favorite exercise involved holding weight behind his back, and then squatting all the way down!

This means the knees went WAY over the toes.

But modern “exercise science” built on a piece of false data: “no knee over toes…” Image
In the 1970s a university found that found that knee over toe = more pressure on knee.

That is true.

But it’s the ability to HANDLE pressure that preserves the body!

So maybe it’s too late for you to squat like George right now.

But can we reverse engineer it?

ABSOLUTELY…
Read 7 tweets
Jan 3
🧵 Thread: Here are the 4 flexibility standards I currently maintain from home…

1/4. Palms to Floor Elephant Walk, 20 reps per side

Simply put your hands on something elevated to make it easier. Same exercise.

This has been a long-term winner for my back, but…
I think of the Elephant Walk as a finishing touch on the stretch-strength RDL.

“Be great at resisting rounding your back…

But also be capable when called upon to round.”

I’d argue this approach is exponentially better than a “one or the other” mentality…
2/4. Head to Floor Standing Pancake, 20 reps

Elevate hands to make it easier.

Progress from hands, to elbows, to head.

Wider you go, STRONGER your groin gets, since you’re in control rather than passive.

Again: stretch-strength = exponential protection in my experience…
Read 12 tweets
Jan 2
🧵 Thread: Sometimes life is simpler than it appears.

Exercising your full range of motion is one of the most powerful tools for keeping/regaining the physical activities you love.

Here are the barriers and how to overcome them…
1. If it doesn’t feel good, I can relate...

I had to rebuild this quality one side at time.

Life can have its injuries which leave us far from the pain-free mobility we had as kids.

Fortunately, the better the ATG split squat gets, the better full range of motion squats feel:
2. The college textbooks don’t allow it.

“No knee over toes.”

“No full range of motion.”

This was based on a presumption in the 1970s.

“Knee over toes = more pressure on knees.” This was correct.

The presumption to AVOID it wasn’t…
Read 12 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(