amandawithroses
New member
Hey people,
I just wanted to share a recent experience I had with the notorious "What-The-Hell Effect".
Yesterday I clocked a few PBs:
1) 80 Kg ATG back squat for 10 reps (up from 4 reps)
2) 85 Kg ATG back squat for 10 reps
3) 90 Kg ATG back squat for 6 reps (up from 2 reps)
4) 110 Kg SLDL for 3 sets of 7 w/o straps (up from 3 sets of 4 w/ straps)
At my current bodyweight (78 Kg), these numbers aren't spectacular by any means but the real interesting part is that I haven't done any proper barbell work for nearly half a year! My current training has revolved heavily around double half-snatch (thanks @loves2readya and @martincy for the inspo), specifically EMOM volume/density cycles. I'm currently at 12 rounds of 4 reps with 20s and 11 rounds of 7 reps with 16s (Heavy/Light) - again, nothing special.
Of course, I probably could've made these same gains (or even greater ones) with regular, structured barbell work but this goes to show that kettlebells are very much a viable and effective tool for not only maintaining strength but developing it. I know that I'm mostly preaching to the choir here but as a long-time lurker on this sub, I know there are still plenty of people who want to take up kettlebelling but are afraid that they'll melt their existing strength gains away and end up like some kind of emaciated ultra-endurance marathon runner. There are plenty of experienced kettlebellers in this sub who have already disproven this notion but I just wanted to chuck my experience out there to provide some inspiration and/or insight.
Cheers!
I just wanted to share a recent experience I had with the notorious "What-The-Hell Effect".
Yesterday I clocked a few PBs:
1) 80 Kg ATG back squat for 10 reps (up from 4 reps)
2) 85 Kg ATG back squat for 10 reps
3) 90 Kg ATG back squat for 6 reps (up from 2 reps)
4) 110 Kg SLDL for 3 sets of 7 w/o straps (up from 3 sets of 4 w/ straps)
At my current bodyweight (78 Kg), these numbers aren't spectacular by any means but the real interesting part is that I haven't done any proper barbell work for nearly half a year! My current training has revolved heavily around double half-snatch (thanks @loves2readya and @martincy for the inspo), specifically EMOM volume/density cycles. I'm currently at 12 rounds of 4 reps with 20s and 11 rounds of 7 reps with 16s (Heavy/Light) - again, nothing special.
Of course, I probably could've made these same gains (or even greater ones) with regular, structured barbell work but this goes to show that kettlebells are very much a viable and effective tool for not only maintaining strength but developing it. I know that I'm mostly preaching to the choir here but as a long-time lurker on this sub, I know there are still plenty of people who want to take up kettlebelling but are afraid that they'll melt their existing strength gains away and end up like some kind of emaciated ultra-endurance marathon runner. There are plenty of experienced kettlebellers in this sub who have already disproven this notion but I just wanted to chuck my experience out there to provide some inspiration and/or insight.
Cheers!