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About Calisthenics

gymantix calisthenics

Calisthenics are a form of bodyweight exercise that create a strong foundation for improved fitness

Calisthenics are bodyweight exercises in which your body’s relationship with gravity creates the resistance. These movements are fundamental for athletes from all walks of life and at all levels of experience. Calisthenic exercises incorporate aspects of balance and coordination, resistance, and mobility to help you build strength and muscular endurance.

Simplicity is a good word to describe calisthenic exercises. This type of training uses all the classics— air squats, push-ups, pull-ups, etc.,— with increased intensity and advanced positions over time. While bodyweight training might sound like a basic exercise, that doesn’t make it easy.

Bodyweight training is versatile, with variations and modifications to make the movement more accessible to beginners or more intense for progression. Once you have good comprehension of these movements and their variations, you can structure your workouts to develop all of your body parts while experiencing a wide range of benefits.

How To Start Calisthenics Workouts?

The way to begin your bodyweight journey is to learn the basics. Of course, you have push-ups, pull ups, air squats, hamstring curls, handstand push-ups or pike push-ups, dips, and Australian pulls, and sprints. (Don’t worry, these will be covered in depth later.) With a few key movements, you can create a workout plan based on those and their respective variations. 

For the first week or so, familiarize yourself with these bodyweight movements. Some of them might be a bit awkward when you’re just starting out, but that’s only because there’s zero muscle memory. Once you get the hang of the classics, up the reps and challenge yourself until it’s time to learn a new, harder variation.

The best way to structure a calisthenics workout schedule is to group together similar body parts: push muscles and pull muscles or upper body and lower body. You can work these as often as you want, put two of them together on the same day, or go full body three times a week.

The important thing to remember is you’ll want to target each group of muscles every 48-96 hours or so, to maximize muscle and strength gains while allowing your body to rest and recover.

A great reason to go with calisthenics as your workout of choice is the equipment needed. What you need is:

Your body

Floor space

A horizontal bar that’s just out of reach above you. If you don’t have a park or bar near you, we recommend one of these outdoor pull up bars for good weather days.

A set of parallel bars at hip height

That’s the basics, though you can get away with just your body and some room to move to start. That will cover your push exercises and abdominal movements, as well as most leg work. The horizontal bar is needed for both pulling work and hanging ab exercises. And the short parallel bars are mainly used for dips and Australian pulls.

These items can be found at any local park, school gymnasium, or you could even make your own set in your backyard! The fact that you can find a monkey bar setup and parallel bars for free in your neighborhood is a wonderful way calisthenics can give you the gift of fitness on the cheap.

everyone can do calisthenics

You can do calisthenic exercises even if you've never worked out before. The beauty of calisthenic movements is no matter your athletic ability, you can do a variation of them. When starting calisthenics for beginners, modifying movements is a common practice. If regular push-ups are too difficult; you can start on your knees, or inclined with a chair. If full bodyweight dips are too advanced, you can start with a modified chair dip at home.

You Can Do Calisthenics Anywhere

You can do calisthenics training anywhere, anytime. Whether you're at the gym or doing an outdoor street workout in your cul-de-sac. Since you don't need expensive gym equipment to squat or do push-ups, this form of training is great for busy individuals with limited resources. When you need equipment, there's always a chair or playground readily available to act as a bench or pull-up station.

Work Smarter, Not Harder

Many of the movements in calisthenic training are compound exercises. This means that they engage more than one muscle group, rather than targeted isolation movements. In essence, you can get a full-body workout in less time with a calisthenics workout plan.<br /> Essentially, with calisthenics, you're no longer beholden to anything to get a good workout in.

A Bodyweight Workout Isn't Effective

Many people incorrectly assume that a bodyweight workout isn't as effective as weight training. While you won't be able to walk up to a barbell and squat 800 pounds after squatting only your body weight for years, it's incredibly effective for fat loss, muscular strength and endurance, and muscle mass building.

You Can't Progress with a Calisthenics Routine

When you use equipment-based strength exercises, progressive overload is intuitive: you add more sets or reps, or pick up a heavier dumbbell. The same theory applies to a bodyweight workout program. Start by adding more sets or reps in your calisthenics workout routine. Then, intensify the movement. For example, your push-ups might progress to a handstand push-up over time. You might add unilateral training to your squats by progressing to a pistol squat.

Calisthenic Training is for Men/Women

Depending on which side of the internet you stumble upon, you might find that calisthenics are only for men or only for women. The former idea comes from the archaic theory and misinformation about women and strength training. The latter comes from the archaic idea that bodyweight training is easy and that you need big weights to showcase strength or fitness. calisthenics are for everyone.

How To Do Calisthenics For Fat Loss?

The cool thing about calisthenics is, once you understand basic movements and progressions, you can create whatever type of workout you want with these exercises. If your main goal is fat loss or leaning down, you can do just that! You can easily adjust the intensity of your workout, so you can achieve your fitness – regardless if it includes losing weight or building muscles. Both cardiovascular motions – getting your heart rate up into a “fat burning zone” – and strength training are awesome ways to burn calories and, once your glycogen stores are used up, body fat. A combination is best. Structures like Tabata and HIIT are perfect to compliment calisthenics, because these are quick, one after the other workouts where you can’t necessarily move from machine to machine (or worse, involve heavy free weights). It’s safe to go fast and hard with calisthenics exercises, so you can get improved physique fast. For fat loss, you’re looking to burn the most amount of calories in the least amount of time. This drains your glucose stores and starts to target your stored body fat (more on this later). The more fatigued you get, the more blood you get pumping, the more fat will be burned. Of course, this is coupled with a tremendous diet, but we’ll cover that in a few sections.

How To Do Calisthenics For Building Muscle?

This one is hard to believe. I mean, bodyweight exercises for adding muscle? Sounds almost too good to be true. Calisthenics are good for building solid muscle relative to your body weight, but they will only take you so far. Other kinds of strength training, like Olympic training or bodybuilding, are the best for bigger strength gains and targeted, isolated muscle growth. Not only will a calisthenics workout routine help you build decent muscle, it will be full muscle. For example, if you were to rep out on bench press, your hands go only so far - the bar touches your chest and you go back up. However, if you were to do a decline push-up with parallel bars (which can be done) and went down, you can surpass your chest and go as far as possible, extending your range of motion and fully utilizing each muscle group. As long as you keep progressing with your movements, your body will be getting stronger. If you're getting stronger, you're going to build muscle to take on the increased load.

Book a pt session and start training

I believe in a holistic approach to training clients and athletes. Rest, recovery, sleep and nutrition all play an incredibly important role in reaching your goals. Training alone will not bring success and this is where many programs fail.

I understand that most people have busy lives and trying to fit training around work, family and our social lives can seem daunting. That's where I can help. I will be there to support, encourage and motivate you to achieve the best possible results in a fun and positive environment.

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