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Beginner Calisthenic S: WWW - Oldschool-Calisthenic

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960 views18 pages

Beginner Calisthenic S: WWW - Oldschool-Calisthenic

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Gamer's Pride
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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BEGINNER

CALISTHENIC
S

www.oldschool-calisthenic.ro
WHAT TO EXPECT

1. Introduction
2. Old School Calisthenic principles
3. What to expect from this program
4. Proper Warm Up
5. Chart terminology
6. Beginner Workouts
7. Training Journal
8. Recovery
9. Progression
10. HIIT
11. Transition
12. Closing thoughts
INTRODUCTION

WHAT MEANS CALISTHENIC?


Calisthenic is the sport that encompasses a variety of basic exercises using only the bodyweight as resistance.
They are intended to increase body strength, coordination, speed, and flexibility through movements such as
pulling, pushing, jumping, running and so on. If performed consistently and vigorously, calisthenics can provide
the benefits of muscular and athletic body. The word calisthenic comes from the ancient Greek which means
beauty and strength.
INTRODUCTION

WHY CHOOSE CALISTHENICS OVER OTHER TRAINING APPROACHES?


People still buy into the stereotype that bodyweight training is inferior and not an effective way to build strength
and big muscles. They believe that calisthenics bring only good athleticism and endurance. They are wrong! The
Greeks, Spartans and Gladiators practiced calisthenics, and for good reason. We all know their remarkable
statues of the athletic warriors. Bodyweight training methods are still used today rigorously by army, street
workout enthusiasts, martial artists and so on, for the same reason.

There isn’t a champion or elite athlete that don’t do bodyweight training. Do you want to know why? Technically,
calisthenic builds the foundation for all the other sports due to fundamental exercises that entail a family of
compound moves similar to the inertia that comes natural to our body. This moves are: pushups, pull ups, dips,
leg raises, squats, running, twisting, jumping... All of these will teach your body to control itself better no matter of
the difficulty of activities you must do.

WE PUT OUR MONEY WHERE OUR MOUTH IS!!! See for yourself here
OLD SCHOOL CALISTHENIC PRINCIPLES

IT’S A SLOW PROCESS, BUT QUITTING WON’T SPEED UP


We came from almost nothing but our enormous will. A group of skinny guys with difficulties of pulling ourselves from a pull-up
bar, but with goals to becoming very strong, muscular and functional. We haven’t followed the two clichés in which almost
everybody believes:

1. You can’t have real results training with your own bodyweight. RIGHT! Only weight training gets the job done!

2. You need supplements, powders or steroids, BECAUSE EATING PROPERLY IS NOT ENOUGH AND SUSTAINABLE.

We have done exactly the opposite of what a lot of fitness gurus teach.

Since the beginning we wanted to do advanced exercises like one arm pull-ups, muscle ups, levers and handstand pushups.
Back then, it just seemed an impossible goal to achieve. We could have only pictured us at that level in years to come.

We’ve avoided the gym. Thus, the nearest approach was Street Workout! We loved working out in open spaces. It felt the most
natural thing for the body, mind and soul. As opposed to the gym, our approach is free of charge and has no schedule, as well as
increasing creativity by having to use the tools that we find in nature.

Without discipline, perseverance, patience and surpassing the frustrations you achieve nothing! Remember this: push yourself
beyond the physical and mental limitation. Do not stop if you feel bad at the moment! It will make you stronger than ever. No
matter the state of mind or weather conditions! At the end of the week the training journal needs to be complete.
OLD SCHOOL CALISTHENIC PRINCIPLES

YOU EARN YOUR


BODY
FREQUENT CONCERNS:
 What routine is the best? Don’t search the perfect routine. If a
program seems to get you results, stick with it.
 Too many exercises. Generally, you don’t need more then 4
variations from the fundamental exercises.
 When to jump into another type of workout? When you feel a
workout seems too easy or you get bored of it.
 Do you need to train each muscle group separately? No. The
compound exercises work every aspect of the body (e.g. pull-
ups work the back, biceps, forearms, shoulders and trapezes).
 What routine builds muscles? Any routine that put the muscles
on stress for long enough, by definition.
WE DON’T MAKE EXCUSES

WE MAKE RESULTS
TIPS: We always start a routine with the
hardest exercises and progressively move
to the lighter ones. You have seen us doing
weighted calisthenics. YES! This is exactly
the reason why calisthenic is a complete
sport. You can always progress somehow,
like using a training partner as external
weight.

CONDITIONING: The higher your fitness


level, the better you can train. Be
disciplined. Respect the schedule of your
workouts and diet. This is the only way to
success for good athletes.
OLD SCHOOL CALISTHENIC PRINCIPLES

S: IT NEVER GETS EASIER, YOU JUST GET BETTER

 ACT NOW! Practice often! Three times a week and half an hour a session may not be enough.
 Embrace muscular pain. Muscle fatigue is good if you want to build an aesthetic physique.
 Eat cooked food. Try to consume more vegetables and fruits. Drink water, not juice!
 and
DO over againIncrease
MORE! till you reach the ultimate
the number goaand repetitions.
of sets
 Do not get frustrated. Your body is not a machine. It takes time to adapt.
WHAT TO
EXPECT FROM
THIS PROGRAM?
We have had students that
weren’t able to do basic
exercises, such as pull-ups
or pushups. We have
dedicated our time in
observing and helping
them. We have realized
that most people are at
that stage, hence we have
come up with this FREE
workout program. Now
you can act based on our
methods and succeed.

Beginner Calisthenic is
designed to take you to a
path of good health and
strong endurance, with a
very nice looking body as
a by product.

Some of you may find


some workouts easy. Go
through each one of them,
as they gradually become
tougher and more
challenging.
PROPER WARM UP

BEFORE EACH WORKOUT!

Everyone needs proper warm up before any practice or workout.


It increases blood circulation and gets your muscles and joints
ready to function properly.

Stay safe! Injuries can easily be avoided. For instance, a very


commune problem for an athlete is improper warm up of the
elbow and shoulders and that can keep you out of training for
months.

Watch this YouTube video and see how a complete warm up


should look like and apply it at the beginning of any training
session

In case you don’t have any skill in Jumping the Rope yet, replace
it with Jumping Jacks.
CHART TERMINOLOGY

1. TESTS: Firstly, you need to do a couple of different strength tests on: pushups, dips, pull ups and
squats, to determine the level of strength. Aim for a single set of maximum repetitions on each one of
them. Once the test is complete, you will know what level you fit in and begin there. Respect the color
pattern, because that is the workout level you are at. Click on the PLAY™ Icon or on the exercise
name and a YouTube™ Demo will show you which exercise to do and how. These tests are valid only
for Beginner Workouts Chapters.

TEST PUSHUPS DIPS PULL UPS SQUATS


RESULTS

2. LEVELS: Relate the tests with the strength level boxes (In the workout charts they are on the
same column).
Level I 1) knees pushups
2) very incline pushups
0-2 pushups Workout 1 3) wall pushups
Examples:

1) regular pushups
Level II
Workout 2 2) incline pushups
5 pushups 3) knees pushups

PUSHUPS Level III 1) regular pushups


FAMILY 2) incline pushups
10 pushups Workout 3
3) knees pushups
4) wall handstand
 3 to 4 levels of strength. Each
level has different exercises. Level IV 1) Decline pushups
 The exercises are all numbered. Workout 4 2) Regular pushups
Respect the order. 10-20 pushups 3) Incline pushups
4) Wide pushups
5) Plank to pushups
6) Wall Handstand
CHART TERMINOLOGY
Level I 1) Negative dips
2) Bench dips
1-3 dips Workout 1

Level II 1) Dips
DIPS Workout 2 2) Negative dips
FAMILY 3-6 dips 3) Bench dips

Level III 1) Dips


Workout 3 2) Front bar dips
6-12 dips 3) Bench dips

1) Negative chin ups


Level I
2) Assisted chin ups
0-1 pull-up 3) Australian pull ups
Workout 1 4) Hanging the bar

1) Chin ups
Level II 2) Negative chin ups
Workout 2
PULL UPS 3) Assisted pull ups
2-3 pull-ups 4) Australian pull ups
FAMILY
5) Hanging the bar

1) Pull ups
Level III
2) Chin ups
Workout 3 3) Australian pull ups
4-6 pull-ups
4) Hanging the bar
CHART TERMINOLOGY

DON’T BE AFRAID TO PUSH


YOURSELF!

3. EXERCISE VARIATIONS: Here you find your


workout. Now watch your results from the tests and relate
the level with the exercises according to the color pattern.
Start with the top exercise and continue with the ones
below.
4. Sets: are a series of repetitions of the same exercise.
You find a minimum and maximum number. Add more if
you want, but not less!
5. Reps: defines the number of times to perform a
single exercise within one set. Choose between minimum
and maximum. Play with those numbers, but remember,
more is better! So, push yourself if want to achieve
something good!
6. BREAKS: Play with the interval given. Brake time
makes a huge difference, because your muscles respond
well when you put them to stress. Here, less is more!
7. How many times a week? Practice often! Strength is
skill. Make a practice of working hard. You’ll gain not only
strength, but muscles too. In the 8th column you’ll
understand how many workouts of the same exercises we
recommend.
CHART TERMINOLOGY

8. CONCLUSIONS: BE THE BEST VERSION OF YOU!

 Do a workout till you find it easy or you get bored. Test yourself again, but with 2 sets this time. If you are
stronger, then move forward to HIIT and Transition chapters. You will find them very challenging.
 You may find that you are on a different level of strength on pushups, as opposed to dips or pull ups. Have no
fear! You just pick the level of each big family according to the results.
 For a complete workout session, you need to mix and match the big families of exercises. For instance, you can
mix the workout for dips and pushups in the same routine. Start with dips if you find them more difficult, than
continue with the pushups. If wanted, mix dips or pushups with pull ups. Be creative!
 Never mix SQUATS or LEG ROUTINE with upper body workouts (pushups, dips, pull ups). The reason behind
this secret is: upper body muscle groups and leg muscle groups are unrelated to each other. Hence, the break
for each of them while exercising the other is too big that neither will be worked on properly.
CHART TERMINOLOGY

FAIL MEANS FIRST ATTEMPT IN LEARNING

 You’ll see how to mix and match the workouts each day for a full
week schedule.
 Try to respect the minimum number of sets and reps.
 Set a number of repetition. For instance, 10 reps. And if you can
do only 8, then do a very short break and aim for the 2
remaining.
 The rest between sets and exercises is very important. Don’t
rest too long! Muscle growth happens when you expose them to
constant stress.
 Train the same family of exercises 2-3 times a week. We know
that not everybody has enough free time. Nevertheless, we
gained our physic by working 4-6 times/week. This means 2-3
workouts on the same muscles.
 Every exercise has a demo on YouTube™. Click on the PLAY™
Icon.
 Each workout presented here starts with the most intensive
exercise and progressively towards the easiest one. Respect the
order gave by us. This method will bring you strength, muscular
endurance and mass.
BEGINNER WORKOUTS

Table 1: Pushups Routines

Exercise Test Exercises Sets Reps Break Break How many Conclusions
the big BASIC VARIATION min - max min – max between between Times a See chart
family EXERCISE -workout- sets exercises week terminology
Workout 1 Knees pushups 5-20 If you fall
Level I 30’’ somewhere
0-2 regular Incline pushups 5-7 10-20 – between these
pushups 1’30’’
Wall pushups 30-50 4 levels, you
should try each
Workout 2 Regular pushups 1-3
workout and
Level II
5 regular Incline pushups 6 - 10 4-8 see which is
pushups 1’ – 1’30’’ harder.
Knees pushups 8-15 If this is not
2-3 enough then
Regular pushups 4-6
Workout 3 just mix the
Level III Incline pushups 6-10 8-15 workouts
10 regular between them.
Knees pushups 15-20
pushups 1’-2’ 2’ – 3’ Pick the
Pushups
Wall Hand Stand 3-5 20’’ – 40’’ exercises you
want and work
Decline pushups
Workout 4
on them.
Level IV Regular pushups Another
10-20 Incline pushups 8-15 1’ method is to try
regular 4-5 - 2 the other
pushups Wide pushups 1’30’’ workouts in the
Plank to pushups Max. reps. following
chapters.
Wall Hand Stand 40’’ – 1’

SEE PROGRESSION CHAPTER IF THESE WORKOUTS ARE TOO EASY FOR YOU!
BEGINNER WORKOUTS

Table 2: Dips and Abs Routines

Exercise Test Exercises Sets Reps Break Break How many Conclusions
the big BASIC VARIATION between Times a See chart
min - max min – max between sets
family EXERCISE -workout- exercises
week terminology
Workout 1 Negative dips Max. reps. Two different
Level 1 Bench dips 6-10 6-20 1’ – 1’30’’ 1’30’’ – 3’ types of bench
1-3 dips dips are
Workout 2 Dips 10 2-4 presented in the
Dips Level II Negative dips 6-10 Max. reps. 1’ – 2’ YouTube Demo.
3-6 dips If you can’t do full
Bench dips 10-20 2-3 dips like in demo,
Dips 6-10 4-8 30’’ – 1’ 2’ – 3’ then do half the
Level III Front bar dips 5 Max. reps. distance. Click
6-12 dips 1’ – 1’30’’ HERE.
Bench dips 6-10 20-30
Knee raises
The routines (parallel bars) L holds: here
are good Leg raises 4-5 Max. reps. 30’’ – 45’’
especially for (on ground) Strict Hanging
Leg those who
Sit-ups
Leg Raises: here
Raises can’t do strict
and straight Plank If you can do
CORE hanging leg Side plank 3-4 30’’ – 1’ 1’ strict leg raises
Routine raises or L sit 1’-2’ 2 on ground, then
Mountain climbers 5 20’’ – 30’’
holds do these
variations: knees
Sit-ups 4-5 to chest and bent
Max. reps. 30’’ – 1’
Leg raises 4-5 legs raises.
(on ground)
Flutter kicks 4-5 30’’ – 1’

KEEP A TRAINING JOURNAL

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