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Thread: Selling Myself Short?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    Default Selling Myself Short?

    • starting strength seminar february 2025
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    Rip,

    I have read both SS and PP, and clearly understand where to start if I were a complete beginner to weightlifting. However, I am familiar with the lifts but am coming off a somewhat extended break and am trying to figure out where to start.

    My current 1 RMs are:
    Squat- 260
    Bench Press- 165
    Press- 120
    Deadlift- 300
    Powerclean- 160

    Clearly I need work which is why I want to do SS, but I am not sure where to begin with regards to weight.

    My current plan is to start with the following weights:
    Squat- 115
    Bench Press- 85
    Press- 65
    Deadlift- 135
    Powerclean- 85

    I am planning on 5lb increases for everything but deadlift (10lbs). Am I selling myself short by starting too light? I figure it was better to start light and continue with linear progression as long as possible. Do you agree with this approach?

    Thanks,
    John

  2. #2
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    No, I don't agree with this approach. The book clearly tells you how to determine the first workouts for all the lifts, at then end of the instruction for each lift. Do that.

  3. #3
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    The book clearly tells you how to determine the first workouts for all the lifts...
    I am still confused as to how people miss this, even those who claim to have read the book.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by TBone View Post
    I am still confused as to how people miss this, even those who claim to have read the book.
    This is the 21st century. "Read the book" = "looked at the pictures."

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
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    Yep I lent the book to a colleague of mine, engineer in his 40s, reads and writes reports all the time, would only look at the pictures

  6. #6
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    I think my original post was not clear. I did the lifts for the first workout as described in the book(s). The numbers posted are where I ended up from that process. However, given my 1RM those numbers seem low to me. Maybe that's exactly where I need to be, I just wanted a sanity check to see if those numbers made sense.

    Re-reading my original post it sounds like I grabbed those numbers out of the air. Sorry for the confusion.

    Thanks,
    John

  7. #7
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    If that's the case, your 1RM numbers are bullshit. Use the numbers generated by the workout.

  8. #8
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    That is what led to my original post. I tested my 1 RMs on Friday 7/15 and did the first workout 7/18 with adequate food and sleep over the weekend, but those numbers are ridiculously low compared to my 1RM.

  9. #9
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    1 RM number's aren't even discussed in the book until the intermediate chapter, as they are considered irrelevant for the novice who should be getting stronger every workout; if you're a novice again, your 1RM should increase day after day.

  10. #10
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    starting strength coach development program
    We don't use 1RM testing for this reason. It is bullshit in so many ways.

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