I want to start the year by checking where I am at in a variety of skills.
To achieve this I would like to pull together a variety of ācheck-listā* style resources and thought this is a good place to do/share/work on this together. I will update and add to this post the ones that are shared.
Get involved - post a checklist for a skill.
Reference - make sure you credit who/where you got it if it isnāt your own.
To get us started below is a progression summary for the Human Flag that I got from [http://bergmovement.com];
Human Flag
Pre-requisites: One Arm Inverted Support + One Arm Active Hang.
Downwards low flag
Low flag
High flag (the foundation for the rest of the human flag progressions)
@johnnybefree I made a video tutorial for the Rings Muscle Up recently:
Here's the breakdown:
Under the Rings:
Get good at doing explosive False Grip Chin Ups
If you can't hang in a false grip do Ring Rows with a False Grip and end each workout by hanging with One hand False Grip, One hand Normal Grip (bent elbows are OK) until failure on both sides. Eventually you'll be able to end workouts with false grip hangs on both sides.
Above the Rings:
Make sure you have a solid RTO Support Hold and get good at doing rings dips with Full Range of Motion.
Transition Section:
Put a chair behind you, place the tops of your feet on the chair so the knees hang down and get into the false grip and isolate practicing the transition-section for 3 sets of 8-12reps. This will strengthen that part AND you'll get used to the movement pattern.
The theme of the post is checklists though rather than breakdown of specific movements if you have are able to do something similar? If not Iām sure I could piece it together on my end from the tutorial. Your progression for L-sit has already been added in this style.
@fromgenesistorevelation false grip side note: for beginners or anyone with a history of tendon issues, consider only training false grip 2x a week or every other day max for the first few weeks and very gradually build up volume.
earlier in the year, hated training false grip so I did it every day thinking I'd unlock it and 'get it out of the way' and ended up with wrist & elbow tendon issues that took several weeks to recover.
obviously my personal anecdote cannot compare to antranik's wealth of experience, but felt this could be a fringe case worth considering.