@ayopoker Well done! Since you can do 10+ in a row, you can make some significant progress with rest-pause routines. Basically, a reverse pyramid session where your first working “set” or “round” (whatever you want to describe it as) will be the most number of pull-ups you do, and it would taper down until technical failure; i.e. you can no longer perform a strict pull-up with proper form.
An example of rest-pause would be:
1st set: strict pull-ups, as many reps as possible (AMRAP); stop 1-2 reps of technical failure
- take a very quick break, more like a 5-10 second breather
2nd set: strict pull-ups, AMRAP, stop 1-2 reps before technical failure (the number of reps will significantly decrease by this time)
- take another 5-10 sec breather
3rd (and do on) set: AMRAP pull-ups again, etc. > breather > AMRAP... rinse and repeat until you can no longer perform 1 clean rep after the breather.
Don’t worry about the number of reps you perform and don’t worry if by the second or third round you already achieve failure. The purpose is to fast forward back and lat development with bodyweight only, that standard prescribed sets and reps might otherwise hinder in that regard. It bypasses the exact feeling of associating any repetitive bodyweight exercise with being a chore.
By intentionally failing quickly, you become efficient: maximizing as much response - muscle recruitment (given proper form) with proportional intensity - in the least amount of time. Once you fail, you’re done for the day. And this can be applied to push-ups, inverted rows, dips, pike presses/handstand push-ups, etc.
To make it even sweeter, don’t count reps. Just know when you’re about to fail within the next 1-2 reps, then rest and pause, and do it again until you do fail. For shits and giggles you can test your rep max and compare your numbers from before and after.
TL;DR - you got good by practicing to get good; now you can get better at getting better.