Transform Your Dating Life in Minutes

If you're looking for a proven system to attract women and achieve dating success, you're in the right place.

Our step-by-step guide is the perfect starting point for any man looking to improve his dating life.

With our expert advice and strategies, you'll be able to overcome common obstacles, build confidence, and start attracting the women you desire.

Thanks for joining us, and I wish you all the best on your path to success!

Guide to hands-only pushups

AlexTheGreat

Senior Don Juan
Joined
May 9, 2004
Messages
497
Reaction score
7
There is a way to build up your chest and back, without having to go to the gym. It involves simple, but very hard exercises, but develops a massive chest, works the forearms, the back and every other upper-body muscle. At the same time, it develops lean strength and stability (meaning you will be more powerful and able to carry things away from your body a lot easier). Let's begin:

Step 1: Building the base

Before being able to lift yourself off the ground using your hands only, you must pack some basic muscle on, and develop your stabilizers. To do that, start off slow. Crouch to the ground, in a position similar to a sprinter's starting stance. Put your hands on the ground, a little bigger than shoulder-width, and make sure your arms are completely vertical (this does NOT mean to keep your elbows straight. By all means, bend them: it will work even better). Next, install your knees on your elbows (your legs should be spread wider than your elbows, at knee level), lift your feet on the tip of the toes, and distribute more weight to the arms. Lean forward a little more, until your arms are supporting your whole body weight (lift your feet off the ground). This may take a few days to master, but it is the basis upon which everything is built. Once you get stability, you can try varying the elbow angle, the distance between the hands, and whatever else you could adjust: they will all work slightly different muscles, and you want the most complete workout.


Step 2: Lifting yourself

The next step is the most difficult one, because it takes raw strength to pull it off. Ironically, you need strength to build strength.
After having successfully mastered the base, you can go on to lifting your body up. This involves forcing the back and the shoulders to rotate upwards, and lift the knees from the elbows. It is also very difficult to do, because of the strength needed to do this. Don't be discouraged if you're not able to do it at first: when I first started this, I couldn't last more than 2 seconds, or lift my knees more than a few inches off my elbows before crashing to the ground; but a few days of work later, and I was able to keep the stance with relative ease.
Basically, to lift your legs up, try to lean forward a little more (bring your head down to about 2-3 inches off the ground), and elevate the legs. The hard part is keeping balance while pushing (and finding the strength to push!)


Step 3: Closure

Now that you've mastered the base and the lift, all you have to do is go back down .... and start again! This will be incredibly hard to do, even for just a few reps, so take it slow. Eventually, strength will come, and this will become easier. After you have mastered this, your chest, back, shoulders and arms will be built, and you won't even have to go through the trouble of doing the base to do the hands-only pushups: you will be able, by keeping the arms in the same position, but by keeping the knees tucked underneath your chest, to lift rotate on your shoulders and lift your legs up from the arms. Then, when the back has reached a horizontal position, you'll spread the legs out, lean forward to keep balance, and you'll be able to modify this even more as strength builds up!

Here's a little diagram of how the exercise works:
http://alexthegreat.no-ip.com/graph/workout.jpg
 

AlexTheGreat

Senior Don Juan
Joined
May 9, 2004
Messages
497
Reaction score
7
Wider area of muscles worked, and the freedom from equipment. All you need to perform this is your body and around 1 square meter of free space.

Also, this doesn't work only the shoulders, lats, and delts like shoulder presses do, it also works your chest, your abs and your lower back at the same time. Since you're on an angle, the lower back must work to keep the feet level. The whole back must work to keep the arms put, and to control the flex in the back. The abs work to stabilize the legs from moving sideways. The chest works at pumping the arms and helping the shoulders hold the weight. See, with this technique, you get a hell of a better workout, and you feel extenuated after a few reps. Plus, you can show off something pretty cool that not everyone is able to do (hey, a diagonal hand stand, if you lift your legs straight and balance with your head and arms, is pretty hard to do, and very impressive ;))

Oh ya: this technique is my creation! :D
 

Skilla_Staz

Master Don Juan
Joined
May 2, 2006
Messages
2,220
Reaction score
10
Age
36
Location
Omaha, Nebraska
So in other words...

Use weights to get strong, then take an exercise you made up and show off?

Sweet.
 

spesmilitis

Master Don Juan
Joined
Sep 3, 2006
Messages
1,509
Reaction score
6
I used to do these too, but then I went to the gym. I'll start again when im in europe.

I can thinking of another benefit, less pressure on your spine. Probably better for young teens.
 

AlexTheGreat

Senior Don Juan
Joined
May 9, 2004
Messages
497
Reaction score
7
Skilla_Staz said:
So in other words...

Use weights to get strong, then take an exercise you made up and show off?

Sweet.

Where did I say to use weights? The whole point of this exercise is to be able to build a nice chest, shoulders and back WITHOUT having to use weights. Please read my post before jumping on the gun and crapping on my thread. Try the exercise, and you'll see that no matter how built you are, this WILL get you tired.
 

Skilla_Staz

Master Don Juan
Joined
May 2, 2006
Messages
2,220
Reaction score
10
Age
36
Location
Omaha, Nebraska
I didn't intend to "crap" on your thread. I'm just mad. The Packers lost. Again. Ghei.
 

Skilla_Staz

Master Don Juan
Joined
May 2, 2006
Messages
2,220
Reaction score
10
Age
36
Location
Omaha, Nebraska
Alright, now that I'm over the Packers' loss, I must say this.


Bodweight exercises are great. However, they only get you so far. Doing handstand pushups, hands only pushups or whatever you want to call them has one flaw: In order to increase the weight used, you either need to GAIN WEIGHT or add weight. While adding a chain during DIPS or something is easy, I don't see how you could add weight while standing on your hands.
 

md3sign

Senior Don Juan
Joined
Nov 26, 2006
Messages
404
Reaction score
1
Location
Everywhere
Can you do planche pushups? Not the same thing as handstand pushups at all (which is just an incomplete ROM upside down overhead press using bodyweight). I think I'm pretty strong and there's no way I could even do 1 - that's a TON of core and arm strength relative to bodyweight required there.

Nice big 3 btw, got ya beat on bench but behind in the other two :D
 

Skilla_Staz

Master Don Juan
Joined
May 2, 2006
Messages
2,220
Reaction score
10
Age
36
Location
Omaha, Nebraska
hah My bench has ALWAYS been my weak point, never really liked it. Your squat is ATG, while mine is just slightly around ||. I'm working on bringing it down farther.

Hopefully by Feb my bench will be up into the 200's
 

md3sign

Senior Don Juan
Joined
Nov 26, 2006
Messages
404
Reaction score
1
Location
Everywhere
Yea I guess it's just different for different people. My dead should go up nicely now than I've switched over to the darkside and started using an alternate grip. I agree though - bringing up bench sucks and it's no easy feat. Good luck on that 200! I quit when I reached 2 plates for reps. My ego is now eternally satisfied :D
 

Skilla_Staz

Master Don Juan
Joined
May 2, 2006
Messages
2,220
Reaction score
10
Age
36
Location
Omaha, Nebraska
I make about 5lbs each week, its just getting in there and DOING it is my problem. I love my squats and deads, hate my bench. But yes, ALT grip is 10x easier than overhand. Glad to see another RAW lifter too.
 
Top