Smooth Squat Progression For Life, Plus Starting Protocol
My goal is to make this the simplest squat thread I’ve done, so you have confidence on this subject from here on out…
First off, I like 3 sets of 5, 5 SECONDS DOWN each rep as a starting protocol.
With this in mind, there’s nothing wrong with starting off ASSISTED…
Next from assisted would be bodyweight with reach.
Even mastering your bodyweight for 5 reps 5 seconds down would be a worthy baseline for life…
Next from bodyweight would be loaded with FULL REACH.
In fact, counterbalance in itself is a helpful trick that often gets people winning with less pain!
Next from full reach is partial reach, but heavier!
Both the distance to the body AND the load increase demand!
Next from partial reach is no reach, even heavier!
In my coaching experience, this is fantastic for general health.
I then use barbell based on desire / higher athletic demands.
More demand? More ability is called for…
Next from no reach is on the body, even heavier.
I set goals here based on the athlete.
For example, for most purposes, how well you can handle your own weight in additional load is a fantastic goal.
To make extra clear:
Once we start loading, we have a smooth scale based on load AND DISTANCE from body.
This is how I’m able to get EVERY student of mine winning with squats.
Now for the subject of heel elevation…
Heel elevation is NOT necessary, BUT most people have lost some squat mobility due to not training it and/or sitting in chairs 8+ hours a day from a young age.
I’m homeschooling my kids and… they don’t have chairs yet lol! (Floor sitting is a mobility workout.)
Also…
Even if you don’t need heel elevation, it is a simple yet powerful tool to help activate the muscles around the knees!
It also allows my favorite knee pain reducer: the reverse step up, which I’ll cover again this week as its own smooth scale!
AND the deep split squat is another solution for deep squats!
Working both deep squat and deep split squat on average once per week has slowly but surely turned my knees from weakest link to strength over the past 10 years.
I’ll cover its smooth scale later this week, too!
Conclusion:
The deep squat is an effective exercise to protect and preserve the knees, IF:
“…technique is learned accurately under expert supervision and with progressive training loads.”
3 x 5 5 SECONDS DOWN with the above smooth progression is how I do this!
If you’d like to get on one of my full programs which have helped thousands of people to knee and lower back success stories: atgonlinecoaching.com
And my USA-made slant is at atgequipment.com, but it’s expensive so the dimensions are below as well.
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A back extension is my favorite piece of equipment for lower back health, and in this short thread I’ll cover how to makeshift one, how I coach it, and my favorite exercise without one…
A squat rack is among the most common home gym equipment items.
Add a pad or wrap a towel around the bar, put something immovable behind your feet, and you’ve got a back extension.
It’s my favorite piece of equipment for two main reasons.
1. It allows extremely gentle starting levels! This helps end the cycle of back painkillers and avoiding strengthening.
My #1 LONG-term low back health exercise is the Seated DB Deadlift and the most common question I get is what to do once the weights hit the floor.
That’s actually one of my favorite things about it!
Teaches to retract and resist rounding!
Short thread…
With those two intentions:
Resist rounding
Retract shoulders
You get increased inner thigh stretch, and stronger lower back.
Keep in mind the oldest in my faculty class is 85, and she works the same motion with no weight, then light dumbbell, etc!
Now let’s sort out the CONTEXT, FULLY:
This isn’t a competition lift.
This isn’t “better” than deadlifting.
It’s a deadlift, with more inner thigh stretch, more time under tension for low back muscles (rather than dropping weights down), and incredibly GENTLE levels.
I hope this is the most detailed deep squat thread you’ve ever read.
Step 1: 25 pound plate or less is ideal for full reach.
(Once COUNTERBALANCE clicks, you can be among the world’s most effective knee coaches, regardless of background. I only know from living it!)
Onward…
Step 2: 45lb plate is ideal for slightly closer, still reaching but only in front of knees rather than fully extended - not to mention this is an increased load! Two subtle progressions from Step 1.
(Step 2B: kettlebell is also ideal for this slightly reduced reach and gradual loading!)
Yesterday’s thread covered the most underrated long-term lower back exercise, in my opinion, and today’s thread covers my favorite piece of lower back equipment to add, with the full, unusual progression I use...
The Seated Deadlift is the most underrated long-term lower back exercise in my opinion, and in this thread I’ll explain my main theory on the lower back pain epidemic, concluded from 15 years of observation as a coach, and helping people to hundreds of low back success stories…
My theory is that, in youth, we are actually way STRONGER, proportionately, through our FLEXIBILITY.
As life, injuries, modern chairs, “no knees over toes” etc., stiffen and WEAKEN us through our flexibility, we deviate from natural and ask for trouble…
Recently I’ve done videos on the squat portion of this equation.