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Over the last 9 months I have gained a new perspective on the matter of lifting heavy things. I decided to take weight lifting seriously, hired a coach and went for it. I am now dead-lifting 200 lbs (90 Kg) and squatting the same. If you saw me walking down yhe street you'd have no idea. By the end of the year I should be at 315 for the deadlift.

Before doing this I never imagined someone could look "normal" and move this much weight. I thought this was the domain of guys with huge muscles.

Anyhow, a long way to say that workplace injury could probably be averted with training.



I agree with the essence of your argument (and congratulations on the training).

I do, however, fear i might've brushed over the essential idea - rather than provide training, wearable's should provide constant 'feedback' if you will to the user, while also providing partial/full assistance to whatever the objective might be. To use an analogy, if you were to draw an imperfect curve, the wearable would 'smooth' out the curve as it was drawn - providing training as a side-effect (muscle-memory, if you will), but that isn't why it would be used (it would be used so you could draw better curves, and maximize your potential as an artist [or in reality, as a worker etc]).

I work with exos., so if you have any other questions, I can probably answer them.


90kg is not that heavy for a squat or deadlift. You need hardly any (visible) muscles for that (unless you are a very small woman).

I hope you keep up your progress! There's lots of it left.


As someone who got to a 90kg squat (and 100kg deadlift) in three months while still having the skinniest legs possible, I am amazed at how efficient muscles are while being tethered at the very end of a 1 meter lever.

I'm pretty sure that our quadriceps could lift a one-ton weight, if attached to it, if only a few cm. That's amazing to me.


The concept is as you hint, very much one of continued leverage to prevent reverse movement with constant micro gains in forward distance.

https://youtu.be/0kFmbrRJq4w

Very much a parallel process with the same kind of force multiplication as any gear ratio mechanical advantage. Quite marvelous what the simple ability to "stick" can be translated into. Tremendous static holds equals tremendous kinetic force :-)


Well, let me disagree. Lifting 90 Kg for someone with probably a decade of a lack of serious exercise due to sitting in front of the computer for 16 hours a day building a couple of businesses is a LOT. I used to swim and do martial arts. I got to a point where I couldn't recognize myself because of how out of shape I got. Not grossly overweight but just weak and with a serious lack of mobility.

Weight in the vicinity of 100 Kg, is dangerous to put on your shoulders or lift off the ground. It could put you in the hospital. Age is a factor, of course, I'm over 50. Yet, even for younger people, it's a dangerous amount of weight.

I purposely took it very easy. I devoted four months to very slow and careful general strength (machines), flexibility and mobility exercises. Also added cardio. The idea was to get a little injury-proof before starting down the path of more serious lifting.

Having said that, now that I am on a roll I see making significant gains over the months ahead. Carefully and safely.


We agree in spirit: it's not how much you lift right now, but that you make progress. Safety is a big part of that: you can't make no progress when you are injured.

I started lifting when I took my first desk job at age 23 and was noticing how lazy and weak I was becoming. Of course, at that age you can go much harder than at 50 years.

I regularly deadlift and squat above 150kg, which I achieved in the first two years. (I admit I got lazy, so I'm not progressing as fast anymore.) I weigh around 70kg. (Best ever was 170kg squat, and 160kg deadlift. My grip sucks.)

I would advise against using machines. They are not ergonomic, because they force your body into their path, and don't train the smaller stabilizer muscles. (Having said that, machines are better than not doing anything.)

Good luck with your future gains! Remember to eat enough (in case you are one the skinny side now).

Weight lifting is great if you just want to make some quick gains in a very straightforward way. I also enjoy rock climbing and gymnastics. Have you tried either of them? (Gymnastic rings are pretty cheap off Amazon. Slacklines are also fun, and cheap. But you need a park nearby with some trees.)

For light cardio, ballroom dancing is great---if you enjoy the social aspect.

(By the way, I managed to coax my girlfriend at the time into lifting, she weighed around 60kg and managed to pull 100kg in a deadlift after a few months. She was already into rock climbing for a year before she started lifting, but no other exercise to speak of.)


I stopped using machines back in December. They are a complete lie.

I'm progressing at a rate of about 5 to 7 Kg per week, haven't hit the asymptotic portion of the gain curve yet.

I plan on re-incorporating swimming into my routine in a few months. For now I am focusing on lifting.




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