Paulx & Abuser
Ever considered building a training routine that turns your raw power into a calculated advantage? I'd love to hear how you'd structure it.
I ain’t one for fancy plans, but if I’m going to turn muscle into a weapon, I’ll split it into three parts: first, the heavy lifting—deadlifts, squats, pull‑ups, anything that builds core and base strength. That’s the “raw power” phase. Next, I add speed work—short sprints, explosive plyometrics, shadow boxing. I keep it brutal, no fancy drills. Finally, I throw in some skill drills, like sparring with a partner who knows how to land and dodge, and I’ll do conditioning circuits that mix cardio with heavy lifts, so I can stay moving under pressure. I hit the gym 5–6 days, rest 1–2, and if I feel the urge to rage, I let it out in a controlled way, not on people. That’s the routine.
Sounds solid—heavy base, then speed, then skill. Just keep track of recovery, or you’ll hit diminishing returns. Good.
Right, I’ll track the rest, no excuses. If I start slipping, I’ll cut back or push harder, but that’s the only way to keep the edge.
Keep a log of reps, sets, and how you feel each session—data is the only truth. Adjust based on what the numbers tell you, not the mood. Stay disciplined.
Yeah, I’ll keep a log, no excuses. Numbers matter, mood’s a distraction. Discipline keeps me from slipping.
Nice, let the numbers drive you. Keep it consistent, and you'll stay ahead.