So this morning I finally finished 35 working sets of my Viking brother Kenneth Jay's Viking Warrior Conditioning 36:36 protocol.  For me that was 17 snatches per 36 seconds with a 16kg bell.  Now it's on the the next phase the MVO2 Boost Protocol!  It's been one helluva protocol so far….but forget about the workout, it's the RESULTS.  Still maintaining my bodyweight but gaining more muscle mass while losing more bodyfat…..AND moving better and better….
For more on this dynomite conditioning program: http://www.dragondoor.com/b39.html
-Jimmy Yuan RKC, CGFI

Posted via email from warriorrestoration’s posterous

Body Movement & Therapy

Celebrities such as Claire Danes, Penelope Cruz, Sylvester Stallone, Jennifer Lopez, and Matthew McConaughey have all added kettlebell training to their body sculpting workouts.

The cast and crew of the film “300″ trained with Mark Twight of Gym Jones in Utah to get in shape. To get the bodies of ancient Spartan warriors and support fight training, the Warner Bros press kit explains, “the training emphasized athleticism by combining compound movements, lifting, and throwing. Primitive tools – medicine balls, Kettlebells, rings – were used instead of machines.”

Athletes of all different shapes, sizes, and sports have certainly jumped into kettlebell training also. Everyone from professional football strength coaches to UFC fighters is discovering, studying, and implementing kettlebell training in their strength and conditioning regimens. Even Bruce Lee trained with kettlebells!

Police, firefighters, and armed forces are all doing kettlebells too! The Spec-Ops teams are using them, the US Secret Service has its own kettlebell snatch test, plenty of SWAT teams are training with them, and more and more fire companies are realizing that kettlebell training is perfect for developing tactical strength without bulking you up.

The elite of the US military and law enforcement instantly recognized the power of the Russian kettlebell, ruggedly simple and deadly effective as an AK-47. You can find Pavel’s certified RKC instructors among Force Recon Marines, Department of Energy nuclear security teams, the FBI’s Hostage Rescue Team, the Secret Service Counter Assault Team, etc.

Once the Russian kettlebell became a hit among those whose life depends on their strength and conditioning, it took off among hard people from all walks of life: martial artists, athletes, and regular hard comrades.

If you want to get an idea of what sort of body kettlebell training develops, think less about Arnold Schwarzenegger and more towards Bruce Lee.  Not an athlete, a Navy Seal, or a celeb?  Kettlebell training is still for you!

Benefits Of Kettlebells

February 9, 2010

Improved Physique: Russian kettlebells (KB) are not for Kens and Barbies who want to look like “a collection of body parts”. KB’s forge doers’ physiques along the lines of antique statues: broad shoulders with just a hint of pecs, back muscles standing out in bold relief, wiry arms, rugged forearms, a cut midsection, and strong [...]

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Bare-foot running and mechanics

February 9, 2010

Here’s some interesting stuff on running/foot mechanics: http://barefootrunning.fas.harvard.edu/

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What Is A Kettlebell?

January 24, 2010
Thumbnail image for What Is A Kettlebell?

A “kettlebell” or girya (Russ.) is a traditional Russian cast iron weight with a thick, kielbasa shaped handle coming out of it. The kettlebell goes way back, it first appeared in a Russian dictionary in 1704 (Cherkikh, 1994). So popular were kettlebells in Tsarist Russia that any strongman or weightlifter was referred to as a [...]

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Semantics: training, exercise

January 19, 2010

So I hear this all the time: “I exercise all the time, how come I get hurt?” First initial thought tha comes to mind is because you exercise all the time your body never gets to regerate/recuperate. Let’s dig even a little deeper: “I workout my shoulders, how come I still get hurt?” Consider this, [...]

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‘Nuff Said

November 17, 2009

During your training session(s) one question to ponder when things get challenging: “Are you really tired or are you just giving up?” If your tired and form is starting to suffer, then stop. You can regroup/reset and restart again…and if things still are lacking then stopping may be the wise option. There is no reason [...]

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Why??????

October 13, 2009

So what drew me to hardstyle kettlebells? In a nutshell: the Turkish Get-up (TGU). In 2008 I was lucky enough to learn sign up for a seminar about Gray Cook’s FMS and SFMA system. In learning about and how to assess our population’s movement dysfunctions, discrepencies, and compensations I soon learned how dysfunctional I was [...]

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