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March 18, 2024
Roundaboutation Edition
On Starting Strength
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Fingerprints of the Gods, Bar Thickness, and Long-Legged Lifters –
Rip answers questions from Starting Strength Network subscribers and fans. -
The Barbell Curl in Strength Training by Mark Rippetoe –
The classic Barbell Curl is most closely associated with bodybuilding, since the first thing everybody thinks about the exercise affecting is the biceps, The Most Important Human Muscle… -
Florida’s First Starting Strength Gym –
Made famous by a mouse, Orlando is home to Florida’s first Starting Strength Gym. Starting Strength Orlando has a strong family feel that has grown organically, with some great stories to tell about their journey. -
Building a Plan for Powerlifting/Strengthlifting Meets by Scott Acosta –
Choosing attempts during a powerlifting lifting meet can be stressful; especially if you’re going in solo. You’ve just finished your previous attempt and you’re soaked with adrenalin… -
Deeds of Arms –
Nick and guest John Valentine discuss challenging and testing oneself, fight and firearms training, and the upcoming Lift, Shoot, Fight training camp. - Weekend Archives:
Combat Worst-Case Scenario by Lt. Col. Ryan Whittemore –
“All the mystery of combat is in the legs and it is to the legs that we should apply ourselves.” I remember reading this quote… - Weekend Archives:
Training and Discipline by Mark Rippetoe –
I know that you have noticed the same thing I have in recent years: everybody’s attention span has gotten shorter…
In the Trenches
Despite having a lat tweak, Matt pulls a PR deadlift for 5 reps at Starting Strength Boston. [photo courtesy of Stephen Babbitt]
Addy evaluates Coach Tyler’s grip width, provides a few post-set technique pointers, then congratulates him on a job well done. The coaching interns keep getting younger and younger at Testify Strength & Conditioning in Omaha, NE. [photo courtesy of Phil Meggers]
Participants from New York, Michigan, and throughout Texas for this past weekend’s Self-Sufficient Lifter Camp held at WFAC. [photo courtesy of Nick Delgadillo]
Meet Results
The annual Testify Leprechaun Lift-off weightlifting meet took place this past Saturday (03/16/24) at Testify Strength & Conditioning in Omaha, NE. View a recording of the meet
For the women, the Best Lifter Award (Morgard the Manatee) went to Morgan Johnson, and for the men, the Best Lifter Award went to Tyler Wagner. The Best Lifter Awards were determined using Sinclair points. Full meet results
Geneva returns to the competition platform and hits 44 kg for her 3rd attempt snatch. She went 6-for-6 in her first meet back and is now looking forward to besting this meet’s lifts at the upcoming Testify Barbell MAYhem in May. [photo courtesy of Phil Meggers]
In his first weightlifting meet, Dave cleans-and-jerks 53 kg for his 3rd attempt. Dave is also competing in the upcoming Testify Strengthlifting Challenge in April, and then he’ll be looking to set more snatch and clean-and-jerk PRs at the Barbell MAYhem weightlifting meet in May. [photo courtesy of Phil Meggers]
Tyler steps onto the weightlifting competition platform for the first time and goes 6-for-6 on the day. He finished the day with an 82 kg snatch, and here, he nails 93 kg for his 3rd attempt clean-and-jerk. [photo courtesy of Phil Meggers]
Get Involved
Best of the Week
Tips for training with a coach
Rod J
We talk a lot about what it means to be a good coach for barbell training, but what makes a good trainee for a Starting Strength Coach to work with? Besides the obvious, like dedication and compliance, what sets apart exceptional trainees? My apologies if this is discussed more in depth in Strong Enough or Mean Ol’ Mr. Gravity as I haven’t read those yet, but I did have some more specific questions:
When it comes to programming, how much room does a trainee have to question or discuss their coach’s programming decisions (without undermining the coach’s expertise or experience)? For example, when a trainee has recovered poorly due to family commitments/ work schedule and thinks a programming change may be needed, a trainee feels like they can stretch out an NLP for a bit longer before going to more intermediate programming, etc.
Is there anything that you think trainees often don’t discuss with coaches that may impact training/programming (I guess other than medical conditions)?
Best of the Forum
Resuming Training After Chemotherapy Cream Treatment?
TommyGun
Any chance someone has experience with this?
My wife made me go to a dermatologist and it was not good. I have to apply chemo cream all over my body which causes the outer layer of the skin to die (essentially redden and burn off). This includes applying to the neck, shoulders, back, face, arms and legs for two weeks.
Has anyone undergone this? How long before the skin heals enough to get back under the bar? Weeks? Months?
I am not rushing it, just curious. Thanks everyone.
(Do not type “chemo cream” into google images. I told you.)
Mark Rippetoe
Does the cream get applied under the bar, on your shoulders?
Jdcuth
Hi, I’m a dermatologist so have some experience in this.
I think you probably mean fluorouracil, not sure of the US trade name. The other cream might be Imiquimod but that is less used for larger areas.
Healing is usually weeks after use. In my experience we review at 8 weeks post treatment where we expect the skin to be back to “normal”.
If you can speak to your dermatologist or primary care physician about getting an emollient to use on the areas until it’s settled. Milder steroid creams CAN be used but it is balanced against them suppressing the actual treatment effects of the cream so would definitely need your dermatologist’s say so.
TommyGun
Thanks for the reply. Yes, fluorouracil is what I am using. I’ll use the 8 week post treatment as a milestone, obviously depending on what the dermatologist says during a post treatment visit. I will set my expectations accordingly. After undergoing this I have a whole new appreciation for dermatologists. Fine work you are doing.
Jdcuth
I guess I didn’t really answer your question and Coach Rip asks the most important question- is the skin affected over an area that would affect good bar position in the squat? If not, I can’t think of a reason not to train. Even if it is I guess it’s still possible- resting a barbell on the area probably wouldn’t affect healing especially if you take care during the unracking and racking. It’s your call but I don’t think it’s crazy to try to keep training.
Thanks for the kind words. I’m lucky that I love my job and wish you all the best for your recovery.
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