"Working
Smart or Working Hard?” (orginally published at mmaweekly.com)
My dad is a pretty cool dude. He's into hot rods (I grew up
around and working on cars), he likes good rock & roll music,
we always watched football together, and he's the one that was
the main driving and supporting force for me when I decided
to pour my efforts into working out (a lot of what I do now
is still based on stuff he taught me) as a teenager.
My dad was also pretty smart. Among a lot of other things,
he taught me the value of effective communication, of common
sense, and of working smart, rather than hard.
Let's talk about that last one for a minute.
He always told me that it wasn't ever a good idea to work hard
when you could work smart. Always find the most effective way
to do something. If this means using tools effectively, or finding
ways to put in less effort, and it doesn't mean shortcutting
progress or quality, then by all means do it!
I remember one of the first times this valuable lesson hit
me - one of those moments where the light bulb goes off over
your head and you say "Aha!"
I was helping him work on a VW Bug. If I remember right, i
was trying to loosen a nut on the front suspension. I was using
an open-end/box-end wrench, and just couldn't get it loose -
it was just too tight. I was torquing it for all I was worth,
and I just couldn't get it. He came over, and showed me how
to loop another open-end/box-end wrench into the free end of
the one I was using to make an overall longer lever. I pushed
on the two wrenches locked into each other, and with hardly
any effort, the nut came loose. Just seconds before, I was using
all my might and getting nowhere. Now I was putting hardly any
effort in, and achieving success.
In most areas of life, I'd say that the lesson of working smart
instead of hard is one of the most valuable lessons you can
learn. However, such isn't necessarily the case when it comes
to strength & conditioning.
In certain fitness circles (and I'm not going to name what,
who, or where - there are enough arguements and flame wars going
on all over the internet...look around a little, you'll find
them), the idea of working smart instead of hard has come up.
It hasn't been termed that in so many words, but it's the same
idea.
You've got some folks that think that performing exerices and/or
workouts in certain fashions that allow you to do more work
are better for you. You are lifting more weight or doing more
reps, so you're getting more benefit, right?
As ESPN college football analyst says, "Not so fast my
friend!"
Most times, working smart rather than hard lets you accomplish
your work/goals in an easier fashion. And this is fine, as the
work you're making smart (rather than hard) is what you're actually
trying to accomplish something in.
However, with strength & conditioning (S&C) training,
this isn't necessarily the case. You see, S&C training is
prepartion for competition - in the case for most of MMA Weekly's
readers, it's for jiu-jitsu, boxing, MMA, wrestling, or some
other combat sport. It's what you're competing at that you want
to make easier by working smart rather than hard. You're not
competing at your workouts - your workouts prepare you for competition.
If you are finding ways to accomplish your workout through anything
other than making yourself stronger or more conditioned, then
you're cheating yourself when it comes to being ready for competition.
Let's look at a basic example (though it might not necessarily
have the most carryover to MMA, it'll give you an idea of what
I'm talking about). Back in my article about technique, I talked
about how I could help somebody increase their bench press almost
instantly. Learn how to arch the back, squeeze the shoulders,
tense the lats, pull the bar apart - all these little techniques
will let you bench more weight. It's not uncommon for trainees
who learn how to do these things correctly to add 30 lbs. to
their bench press in a matter of a workout or two.
Now, did that trainee get stronger? No - he got more efficient
and his benching technique.
I'm not going to get into the whole technique debate, as I've
done that already. But it applies to the idea of working smarter
rather than harder. In this case, the trainee just found a way
to work smarter rather than harder. The result? His bench press
went up. This is good right? Yeah, but the problem is that we're
not training to compete in a bench press contest. We training
to compete in MMA. Did these little tricks help his bench press
maximum go up? Sure. Will this ability to suddenly move more
weight have carryover to his MMA? Probably not. And the same
can be said for a variety of different protocols for exercising.
Now, does this mean we should go out and look to make our S&C
training as hard as possible? No, but yes. We don't want to
exercise or train in a way that is potentially dangerous (doing
heavy push presses standing on a swiss ball is gonna be a lot
tougher than standing on the floor!), but that doesn't mean
we don't need to work our tail off or look for every "trick
of the trade" for our training. Going back to the bench
press example above, the little tricks I mentioned are great
for somebody training to compete in bench press competitions.
They won't do as much for the MMAist.
It's like I say about a lot of my training and the programs
I put together for people - they might be simple, but simple
doesn't mean easy. My signature I use says it as simple as I
can make it - "Train Hard, Rest Hard, Play Hard."
Just find smart ways to do all three and you'll be set.
Train Hard, Rest Hard, Play Hard.
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