Pushing for Power by John E Peterson

Search Google images for recent, shirtless images of Arnold Schwarzenegger and you might be able to find a sad and depressing image of the greatest bodybuilder in world history. Maybe it’s just the stress of running the state of California, not an easy task. Maybe it’s the side effects of the steroids he allegedly admitted to taking. Maybe he’s just eating too much and no longer exercising two hours a day like he used to claim.

It’s no longer about how you spin it though, the 2009 Arnold Schwarzenegger isn’t an advertisement for the long-term health and fitness benefits of weightlifting.

Compare today’s Terminator to the author of this book, who is only five years younger.

What would you like to look like when you are their age?

Now that you must be convinced that bodyweight exercises can keep you young and strong, Peterson has written a book full of many ways to build your muscles with his Transformametrics Training System.

The author contracted polio at the age of 4 and was left with broken legs that forced him to use crutches. After an encounter with a bully at age 10, his grandfather and a friend of his introduced him to courses taught by Charles Atlas and Earle Leiderman. He hasn’t stopped since.

It begins by listing the 7 attributes of dynamic functional fitness: strength, flexibility, endurance, speed, balance, coordination, and aesthetics.

There are twelve lessons and it prescribes a ten week program beginning with lessons one and two. However, Lesson One does include some extremely advanced push-ups that are not for beginners.

I for one was unclear exactly what exercises to start with. Although he says to exercise for 30 minutes at a time, even doing the Lesson One warmups would take longer than that. Plus, that lesson includes what he calls the three most important ones: Hindu (or Furey) pushups, Hindu (or Furey) squats, and the Atlas pushup.

This is a problem I have noticed in other exercise books. They give you the exercises, they tell you what each one is for, they make suggestions on how to do them, but it’s still up to you to design the schedule that’s best for you, depending on the condition you’re in and the time you have available.

The final section of the book illustrates the problem. He promises that no matter how weak you are now, in six weeks or less you’ll be able to do 500 push-ups a day. Not necessarily all at once, but 500 in total. And he tells several success stories.

He then provides photographs illustrating 13 push-up variations. Then it just says to do as many variations as possible every day.

That is? Should I keep running? How about other exercises? Maybe, like the military man who went from 50 pounds overweight to stud in just a month just from doing push-ups, that’s enough.

It’s worth a try.

about author

admin

[email protected]

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *