B2R Shoulder Stability Project. The Rings.
Two wooden rings, two straps, a lifetime of self discipline and craft. Gymnastic rings are one of the most versatile, low cost, low access tools for developing strength.
Please watch the following video prior to commencing training on the rings. You would be well advised to save and review the content.
You can expect all of the movements described in the above video to be included in this B2R shoulder stability project. This programme will be challenging your shoulder stability through all the directions a healthy shoulder should move. To orient ourselves with those movements, please watch the next video.
Ring training for many of us will be something we have either dabbled with a little, or completely new. There is great variation in the time it takes for different people to progress, and how much training indeed it takes to drive adaptation. For these reasons this shoulder stability project will have different entry and exit points for different people. The format of the programme will be to learn a block training method (which will vary between individuals, anything up to 10-12 weeks for some), we will be using 6 weeks. Truly emergent strategies can only be applied for an individual. Our hope is to instil an understanding of a training block that you can either extend, cut short or re-run until you hit our programmed pre-requisites for progression.
NERD LINK
For an in-depth discussion on emerging strategies, see this presentation by Mike Tuchscherer.
We have travelled far and wide searching for teachers within health and fitness. With regards to ring training we pay tribute to Gymnastic Bodies, Gold Medal Bodies (GMB) Movement Culture and The Phoenix Movement (TPM) in particular.
We appreciate it is a paradigm shift moving from more conventional strength training methods (body building, barbell strength and conditioning - S&C). Gymnastic strength training is extremely liberating in that we can train anywhere, anytime and get jacked, especially with ring training. Many people struggle with the mindset shift, the nature of which will lead you to become well acquainted with failing as the rings move. On a machine we are guided through a pre determined range of movement that does not require us to stabilise like the rings do - and is one proposed reason that gymnasts tend to build very strong upper bodies (see link above where Tyson Edwards outlines his witty thoughts on the matter).
This is after all, a shoulder stability programme, we have seen nothing that demands stability quite like ring training.
Once we can make failure and repetition our friend, the pursuit of achieving something you currently cant do can be highly reinforcing and ultimately help motivate us when training would otherwise be easy to “do tomorrow”. We are passionate and vocal about exercise adherence.
NERD LINK
Paul McCambridge, B2R Director presenting in Oxford all the research surrounding ‘Active Self-Management’ and physical activity.
In 5 years, would you like to be able to put more weight onto a bench press, or squat (these are also great goals), or be able to do your first pull up? or muscle up? or one-arm chin? or iron cross…..the training method is different and this is what we hope to set you on the path towards in this programme. My gymnastic strength training coach Darin often leads into his classes with a metaphor of climbing a mountain. You keep failing, and clambering through the valleys and one day you summit, you hit the peak and get your first pull up, or 10 second handstand. Then you return to the valleys in search of another peak in the distance (30 second handstand, or muscle up or [insert skill you cant do] and the love-hate process of turning up and failing well starts all over again.
The structure of this ring programme will be to support you towards your first pull up, muscle-up or ring flow if you combine several components. However to pass from level A programming to level B there will be pre requisite testing where we must demonstrate 5 chest to bar / ring pull ups with full elbow lockout and 5 ring dips with good form. It is not failure in this programme if you do not graduate to level B within your first pass. It all depends on your starting point and how much time and consistency you can put into your training. Hence our format will be learning to train in block format that you re run until ready to progress. The video of Callie below took her 6 months from where she was to demonstrate pre-requisite pulling strength. It takes as long as it takes but we must learn the process and put some faith (and elbow grease!) into it.
I can’t hold myself above the rings, never mind 5 dips. Is this project too difficult for me
The first 4 weeks of this project will be a ‘familiarisation’ phase. You will get the workouts and navigate all the options provided and have to have a play to find where you are at. To progress however we will need to be able to have success within the levels and rep ranges provided. If, the ring training is currently out of your ‘envelope’ then foundation pressing (for example) on more stable surface are provided.
IMPORTANT
Ring training builds phenomenal upper body strength, however if you are starting out, we must respect tissue adaptation times. Loading all the stabilising tissues (ligament, tendon, joint capsule…) in your shoulders (+elbows / wrists) takes longer than simply training muscle. While this process takes longer, it is arguably more fruitful as we build resilience in not just our muscles, but our joints and this we feel sets gymnastic strength training apart from other training in terms of shoulder (+elbow / wrists) stability. Please see the video below for an introduction (or review) of a metaphor we use for guiding our load management; Envelope of Function.
Reflect on the concept introduced in the video and consider applying it to yourself. When did you last hang for any extended duration? Have you ever hung? Never mind hanging from something that moves. Is your EoF for hanging big or small? This can be zoned in further, is your EoF for shoulder mobility overhead big or small? Your grip strength? your ability to hold yourself still above the rings? How about the skin (callus) on your hands, this has an EoF and will likely become the most readily visible evidence to you of the amazing adaptability that will be going on in your body. Many students of ours become frustrated that hand pain (or tears) holds their training back. This will increasingly become a factor if you have never done false grip before.
Once we have grasp of the concept of EoF, it helps us see where skills, or progressions of difficulty will sit in terms of our EoF. Maybe a muscle-up seems way beyond you now, but a pull up is just outside of your ability. By pitching our training at our threshold that we can perform with solid form, the plan is that we pull tasks from outside our current capacity (EoF), to within. It is worth mentioning here also that training can exceed our EoF in a cumulative way. This manifests as an inability to recover between sessions and is also known as an ‘overtrained state’. Overtraining is often misinterpreted as an amount of training (X sets X reps X days of the week for X months). One persons ‘overtraining’ volume could be another persons warm up. See this article by Scott Abel for more details on smart training, as nothing holds your progress back more than a repetitive strain injury - RSI (a very common symptom of not recovering, in particular in the medial / lateral elbow, wrist and rotator cuff).
In this programme there will be levels of progressions and rep ranges that will be relatively low or high intensity for different people. You will have to learn to auto regulate and listen to your body and your recovery state for when you go hard and when you reduce intensity, or at some point, totally shift up your training focus and move on to other things. This is also a healthy mindset and one we support. You will be invited to a group call each week where Luke will go through common things going well, not so well and help you navigate your programming. This programme will be very intense for most of us with daily work requirements so best advice is to shoot for the ‘minimal effective dose’, find the level of progression you can complete the minimum sets and reps.
Rest periods can be highly variable between people, guidance will be offered however if you need longer to keep the ‘skill component’ of your training up then it is important you do so, this will be a journey of learning how this programme will suit you best.
TRANSITION
It is not uncommon for someone to be able to do 10 pull ups and 10 dips but still not be able to perform strict muscle ups (no momentum). This is due to the transition which is an unusual position to be strong in without specific strength training. This is a consistent barrier so this will be your reference point for how we overcome this. We will be using blocks of time and repetition (greasing the groove some call it).
The rings must remain in contact with us at all times, it is this end range strength most will be missing. Our thumbs trace our chest as we transition from false grip below, to the bottom position of a dip. We use as much assistance with our feet as required to execute this movement. The rings should not move much (they will rotate, however when unassisted the rings will move very little. The goal of this drill is to work for the programmed periods of time gathering as much repetitions as we can, force our bodies to learn the movement. When we are able to, we start to reduce the weight in our feet. If working for a 60s set then you will start with as little weight in feet as you can, adding more as you tire so you can continue cranking transitions out. Even at this level this drill will hurt all over.
There will be enormous progress in anyone who accurately perseveres with assisted transition sets for an 8 week training block. A useful self check for position is to use partially assisted reps, in the end range of each repetition lift (not jump) the legs for a moment before returning to your next rep. If you are currently rooted into the rings you should not swing when you release the feet.
Overtime, working as hard as you can through assisted reps, you can test to see if you can execute unassisted transition sets. It may be that you can start off initially getting one unassisted before returning your feet to the floor (set up height needs to be figured out correctly for you) to complete sets for time, adding assistance through feet as necessary. With time 1 becomes 2, 3 until you can complete the duration at that level. You will also be able to do a muscle up by this point as the transition is what hold most people back.
When training your transition sets, you can lock a level in and maintain for time, or work through regressions from your highest level down as required, both of these options are effective. We have also included some alternatives that could be inserted in just the same way.
Once we are at the point we are able to train consecutive ring muscle ups, we will be working on forward rolls as a progression from transition sets. These are a skill in and of themselves, which will also be trained for time. A strong false grip, awareness of a smooth transition from pushing to pulling whilst maintaining a tight pike position.
If you are new to training (<1 year regular resistance training), then it will be very unlikely you will be able to tax your nervous system enough to need set ‘de-loads’ or rest periods. Varying how ‘hard’ you train and listening to your recovery will suffice.
If you have more than a year of regular strength training, and know how to train yourself at a high intensity, then smart training becomes much more important as ‘overtraining’ will really hold you back. This is generally where I sit on the continuum as I find de-loads difficult to see through (Don’t want to lose GAINZ! Going hard consistently all the time out of a perceived necessity is flawed thinking however. See useful link). This is a FAR better option however than being forced to stop through an RSI. For these reasons I have chosen a 6 week block as a guideline, you may need longer before you need to take a well earned rest.
Study the videos, if your form is poor then the difficulty is too hard and the risk of injury is increased - use this as a marker for training with solid form and mastering the level that you are at to the upper end of sets and reps range in true coach. It is likely that some of these movements are going to be new to you, consistency and repetition will be essential for you to get the most out of this programme and take with you beyond into your future.
See you on the rings
Luke R. Davies,
#B2Rhealth
USEFUL LINK
Gymnastic rings come in several forms (wooden, plastic, strap variations, size of ring….). Here is a wooden gymnastic ring with numbered straps and an option for 1.1 inch or 1.3 inch rings. I personally use a 1.1 ring and this has lasted me 5 years.