I’ve recently decided to pursue VRT ( Visualized Resistance Training ) exercise. It was created by a man named Greg Mangan. Anyone have any experience with it and what do you think of it? Pros and Cons? Thanks!
Grab a copy of Starting Strength and follow that.
Just out of curiosity, how many different and alternative plans are you planning on deciding to pursue? Is it 10 pull ups as a goal, or Body by Science that is the plan …?
How about the advice you gave in one thread - do something fun that you like? (And nothing wrong with a standard approach like Starting Strength or Stronglifts.)
Well what has been your experience with it?
Well 10 pull ups is something one hopes to do. I asked before about body by science to try and find info about it, which I am not going after. There are a couple of different things out there to try and before going after one I would think it’s a good idea to try and get different opinions about it first.
Also access to weights isn’t really an option now.
That cite has got to be a put-on.
I haven’t seen that obvious a scam in 50 years - it makes “As Seen On TV!” look like peer-reviewed science.
Thanks for a chuckle!
There have been lots of threads suggesting programs that develop strength and fitness with little or no cost investment. As has been suggested there are many bodyweight and calisthenic approaches and some that add in weights that you make yourself (just water or sand or concrete in used milk jugs and an old backpack filled with bricks or even books). Stronglifts and the ilk are fine but also not the only way. Anything mix of something that gets your breathing a bit hard with resistance exercises that you can and do progressively make harder (by varying combinations of increased reps and/or increased difficulty) will do it.
So for example the one I recommended in one of those threads:
Nothing magical about it but it would take you far. Rings (which you had a thread about) are great btw, but not for everyone.
No offense intended here but one has to wonder if your ongoing analysis phase trying to find the ideal short cut is more of a way to delay starting a program than anything else.