Take your calories to 4000 and your protein to 250 immediately.
Age: 36, Male
Height: 6 ft
Background: Endurance Cyclist, mainly body weight exercises prior to SS (Quit cycling prior to SS)
Time on Program: ~12 weeks
Starting Weight: 168 lb
Current Weight: 191 lb
Diet: ~3,500cal, ~200g protein per day
Sleep: Consistent 8/9hrs/day except where noted below
Goal: Keep getting stronger
Programming Records:
Tried to attach as PDF, file was too large (~9MB).
Please let me know if there is a way to share these as they would provide additional insight to my shortcomings.
5-8min rest between sets
Started: Novice A/B/A, pathetic weakling
Squat: 95
Bench: 115
Deadlift: 215
Press: 95
Latest completed: Novice A/B/A, somewhat less pathetic weakling
Squat: 220 (3x3)
Bench: 195 (3x3)
Press: 122 (3x3)
Deadlift: 314 (1x5)
Clean: 150 (4x2), started at 95 (3x5) when exercise was introduced during SS progression
Chins: 3x8 Body weight + 15lb
I have consistently used 5lb increments per workout where possible.
Disclaimer:
I do NOT "blame" the starting strength method for my failure. I take full responsibility for whatever it is that I am doing wrong and seek guidance to improve. My resources consist of reading Starting Strength, Practical Programming, and the Barbell Prescription along with YouTube instructional videos. I don't have a SS coach in my area, nor any friends that have an interest in strength training, so I'm pretty well solo. The books have been extremely helpful, but being an engineer for a living I understand well the difference between having access to written knowledge and successfully applying that knowledge - the latter requiring years of experience which I do not posses and as such need some guidance at this point in my progression to apply it more effectively than I have interpreted it from the writings.
Running note:
I enjoy running and tried to incorporate it into my training at first. My body has since told me quite clearly that if I want to keep getting stronger I can't keep running like I used to, so I cut it out.
Squat note:
I am doing high bar squats as I cannot get my left arm into position when doing low bar squats due to the shoulder pain it causes. I've had shoulder issues from old sports injuries, but my shoulders feel great since SS.
Issue:
Week 11 I had trouble sleeping well during the nights after Power Clean workouts due to leg muscle pain (not injury type pain, more like the teenage years of deep "growing pains" for lack of better explanation). I began to try and adjust my programming according to tips in Starting Strength and Practical Programming, reducing reps and including a light squat day, but it culminated in abject failure on the last workout. I couldn't maintain form during workouts and my legs/low back were toast. Mentally I feel good, but my body feels like it has nothing to give. I have not encountered this before, nor am I sure how to proceed.
Humbly request advice for effective adjustments to continue putting weight on the bar and getting stronger.
Thanks in advance,
Dustin
Take your calories to 4000 and your protein to 250 immediately.
Thank you Mark, much appreciated. I understand (as much as one can) that it must surely get old/maddening having to tell folks to eat…I apologize for making you do it the millionth and a half time.
In my case, I had been taking eating seriously - but I erroneously assumed that since I was consistently gaining weight I was eating enough.
I will immediately increase calories and protein as directed. I’ve also scheduled bloodwork next week, just in case.
Thanks again,
Dustin
Pardon the interruption
Search here on SS forums for "barbell handles squats". I spent over a year trying to use Paul Horn stretch to get into a solid low bar position. My 68 yr old surgically repaired shoulder made it impossible but I was determined to low bar squat.
I decided to make some handles with 8mm climbing rope and PVC. They have worked perfectly. Much better than a safety squat bar. I dropped down in weight for one session to get things dialed in and I'm back making progress on regular basis. It's worth a try. The handles are cheap to make.
Thanks for the tip!
I had never heard of such a thing and will give it a shot.
I really need to plan a vacation somewhere with a SS coach and get some proper instruction. As much as I’ve tried to make the low bar squat work I’d still like a coach to be there and confirm I’m not being an idiot, ha.
In the meantime, I’ll try the handles!
Thanks again, much appreciated.
I have not tried that, but I don't have access to a squat bar.
I've likely reached the limit of my self-coaching utility to execute the low bar squat. Having said that, I'm not sure whether a coach would allow me to get my left arm into position - but I'd still like to prove that to myself one day with the help of an actual expert.
The Duffalo bar seems promising given it has geometric advantages for mobility.