1l5 years and mines completely better at this point. Mixture of Reverse Hyper, Good morning and Back Extension for me. But can feel the reverse hyper working on lower back , feels fricking great 👍
@old man strength I don't know which one or any at all. I injured my back squatting 10 years ago, the pain was lingering and rebounded after an year. In a few sessions of reverse hypers the pain was gone. It felt like each rep was healing something in my back ... to be honest.
What is your favorite part? Share below 👇👇 00:00:00 - Intro: The Double-edged Sword 00:00:29 - '73 L5 Fracture and Subluxed SI joint 00:01:00 - List of records and start of IPF 00:02:00 - Goodmornings and losing concentration 00:02:25 - Crutches for 10 months 00:02:40 - Start of the Reverse Hyper 00:03:00 - Recovered because of the Reverse Hyper 00:03:45 - '78 back in top 10 00:03:55 - '81 back to square one again 00:04:20 - Couldn't lay down for 17 weeks and broke my upper back 00:04:58 - 2005 Age 57, 715 deadlift at 217 lbs. 00:05:00 - Age 63, 675 deadlift at 217 lbs. 00:05:11 - Expert on healthy back 00:05:40 - Abdominals 00:06:07 - The spine aligner 00:06:50 - Med ball sit-ups (fused together upper back MRI) 00:07:45 - The advantages of the Reverse Hyper 00:09:04 - Current deadlift stats and no back injuries 00:09:25 - Reverse Hyper volume 00:10:00 - Importance of Isometrics 00:10:25 - Hamstrings 00:10:30 - Hamstring to quad ratio 00:12:00 - No-go exercises in '73 and '81 00:12:53 - The strongest muscle in the body 00:13:50 - Matt Dimel and Paul Childress abs 00:14:25 - Louie's Warm-Up 00:15:10 - Reverse Hyper Technique 00:19:11 - 5 days a week 00:19:55 - Deskjob and reverse hyper 00:20:03 - Can the Reverse Hyper be dangerous? 00:20:17 - Everybody knows Westside but...... 00:21:49 - Reverse Hyper protocol 00:23:13 - Spinal flexion 00:23:51 - No such thing as a dangerous exercise 00:24:35 - The most dangerous thing in a gym is the instructor 00:25:30 - You can't be a puss all your life 00:25:33 - The key to training 00:27:15 - IAP - Study Mariah Ligget PhD 00:27:53 - '79 Bicep tear and recovery Meltdown in Mississippi 00:31:06 - If you don't have a scare, I don't believe you know what you are doing 00:31:18 - Change deadlift training after a bicep tear? 00:31:38 - '91 Injured out of boredom 00:33:05 - High repetitions 00:34:09 - Never be afraid to look stupid 00:34:28 - How Louie ruptured his patella tendon '91 00:35:00 - Anesthesia death 00:36:00 - Come back to squat the second biggest squat in the world 00:36:17 - Matt Dimel ruptured patella tendon 00:36:36 - Andy Vale ruptured patella tendon 00:37:00 - Louie's greatest accomplishment 00:38:00 - Recovery Patella Tendon 00:40:34 - Sled dragging 00:43:11 - Knee (p)rehab 00:45:26 - Non-contact injury 00:45:44 - Don't be afraid to make them strong 00:46:05 - Anti-Fragile body 00:47:58 - Hooke's Law of Elasticity 00:48:55 - The body has to be prepared 00:50:35 - Meniscus injury 00:51:36 - Studies 00:52:35 - Inverse curl and rehab 00:53:49 - Healthy hamstrings = healthy knees 00:56:14 - The spine 00:58:39 - The role of the quadriceps in rehab 01:01:46 - (2005) in '93 broke neck because of the bench; Shoulder injury 01:02:57 - Experiment operation 01:03:24 - Shoulder rehab 01:05:40 - Dumbbells 01:06:32 - Bandbell and Rhino bar 01:08:21 - The bandbell adapts to you 01:09:33 - Different grips in the Bamboo bar 01:10:09 - Bamboo bar and fighters 01:10:51 - Isometrics 01:14:11 - Shoulder rehab exercises 01:16:00 - Active vs. passive work 01:17:48 - The hardest thing in sports 01:20:34 - [S]Training 01:22:06 - The most neglected muscle in the body 01:22:45 - Louie's history of recovery 01:25:00 - What drove Louie? 01:27:20 - Too much salt 01:28:04 - You environment 01:29:37 - Read
This podcast helped tremendously when I injured my back. I was bed ridden for days then weeks and could barely walk but to know that someone was messed up worse than me and fully recovered was exactly what I needed to move forward. Sooooo much knowledge in these podcasts thanks Lou
I can hear Louie all day. I hope u keep the podcast going. U are my greatest teacher and mentor for me, THANK YOU LOUIE SIMMONS and all the people that are making the podcast happen, i hope some day you'll be as big JRE.
maybe my favorite video on youtube. So motivational and helpful. I am a university student, but this is by far the most informative and positive 90 minutes I have witnessed.
@@WestsideBarbellOfficialI bought the Book of Methods a month ago. A great read! But I would love a book focused on the ways Simmons fights back from injuries. Box squats and Sled drags helped so much for my decrepit knees. Too bad many local gym goers haven't had access to his creativity. My personnel anecdote, after years of struggling with knee pain, I employed sled dragging and cured my Patellofemoral pain syndrome within a month.
I just want to say thank you another great pod cast. Many years ago Jimmy Sitzer took into the weight room when was inside OSU stadium and helped rehab a shoulder injury. From then I have been on the path of learning and understanding how to rehab injuries.
Lol i feel proud i can do those leg curls..ive stayed out the gym over a yesr and squat 405 at about 195lbs bodyweight..my coach learned from westside..best strength training i ever experience
Great pod as always! I cant really hear what Louie says at 58:20, I guess its something with the ankle weights I can hear "i did a "blank" up in the powerrack. Need someone to fill in the blank for me :)
Magne Lonn hes saying he used to do reverse hypers with weights fastened to his ankles, lying across a table or bench...before he built a machine for it
Im in columbus, can i come just hang with you guys and check out what you do? My body is mostly fucked from scoliosis and martial arts but these normal trainers at the hospitals dont know jack squat and are children in college usually.
41:35 - You can, actually, do standing thigh extensions, with ankle cuff/cable machine. I use it for people with knee problems, works like magic. There's something about doing the knee extension with the hips extended rather than flexed (standard leg extension machine.) Could you post a video of the wheelbarrow shrug, how it differs from ordinary shrugs?
When it comes to inflammation and injury, where do you stand on that? Shovelling blood through the muscle or trying to get it through the tendon through work will surely increase inflammation and reduce ROM in the short term? Do you just take shit to reduce inflammation or is there a training solution for it?
That's why we stress improving your GPP, doing ultra-high reps with bands, and switching exercises. And also consider your mobility, do not do an exercise that your body isn't ready for yet.
Stuart McGill, the world's foremost authority on back pain, advises keeping away from reverse hypers as they can cause serious disc injuries. He recommends spine-sparing exercises like the bird-dog and the side plank.
I've seen quite a few of his interviews and in one he says it's dangerous then in another he says as long as the hips are free swinging (which they are in the reverse hyper) then it can be good. Depending on the case obviously, every back injury is different. So if you want to ignore an exercise that can potentially help u then that's fine too.
@@cnsgains5506 The bird-dog exercise is vastly superior as Dr McGill recommends. Also, Mark Rippetoe of Starting Strength has removed the RH from his gyms as it was damaging the spines.
I absolutely love Dr. Stuat McGill and his 40 years of experience. I have all his books and have watched all his interviews. That said, I have been practicing his approach to rehabbing my L5/S1 disc bulge now for over a year. I also see a McGill master clinician who is local to me (not cheap). I am still in pain every day, all day. I am seriously considering purchasing a Westside Barbell Hyperextension machine. At this point in my life and 10 years of suffering from lower back pain... I have nothing to lose.
@@7THxSIGN If the birddog exercise hasn't worked, then the reverse hyper will definitely not work, and in fact, make it worse due to undue shear pressure around the discs (refer to his book Low Back Disorders). Try alternative methods like trigger point therapy, Active Release therapy, or Prolotherapy which treats injured ligaments via sugar injections.
Rest in peace Louie you are missed.
Reverse hyper fixed my chronic back pain in a week.
how long u had the pain for was it disk?
1l5 years and mines completely better at this point. Mixture of Reverse Hyper, Good morning and Back Extension for me. But can feel the reverse hyper working on lower back , feels fricking great 👍
@@timshufflebottom828 over 2 years but no disc issues. I had lingering back pain after a squat injury. Reverse hypers fixed it in a few sessions...
Sciatica?
@old man strength I don't know which one or any at all. I injured my back squatting 10 years ago, the pain was lingering and rebounded after an year. In a few sessions of reverse hypers the pain was gone. It felt like each rep was healing something in my back ... to be honest.
Louie was such a treasure. We'll miss you
What is your favorite part? Share below 👇👇
00:00:00 - Intro: The Double-edged Sword
00:00:29 - '73 L5 Fracture and Subluxed SI joint
00:01:00 - List of records and start of IPF
00:02:00 - Goodmornings and losing concentration
00:02:25 - Crutches for 10 months
00:02:40 - Start of the Reverse Hyper
00:03:00 - Recovered because of the Reverse Hyper
00:03:45 - '78 back in top 10
00:03:55 - '81 back to square one again
00:04:20 - Couldn't lay down for 17 weeks and broke my upper back
00:04:58 - 2005 Age 57, 715 deadlift at 217 lbs.
00:05:00 - Age 63, 675 deadlift at 217 lbs.
00:05:11 - Expert on healthy back
00:05:40 - Abdominals
00:06:07 - The spine aligner
00:06:50 - Med ball sit-ups (fused together upper back MRI)
00:07:45 - The advantages of the Reverse Hyper
00:09:04 - Current deadlift stats and no back injuries
00:09:25 - Reverse Hyper volume
00:10:00 - Importance of Isometrics
00:10:25 - Hamstrings
00:10:30 - Hamstring to quad ratio
00:12:00 - No-go exercises in '73 and '81
00:12:53 - The strongest muscle in the body
00:13:50 - Matt Dimel and Paul Childress abs
00:14:25 - Louie's Warm-Up
00:15:10 - Reverse Hyper Technique
00:19:11 - 5 days a week
00:19:55 - Deskjob and reverse hyper
00:20:03 - Can the Reverse Hyper be dangerous?
00:20:17 - Everybody knows Westside but......
00:21:49 - Reverse Hyper protocol
00:23:13 - Spinal flexion
00:23:51 - No such thing as a dangerous exercise
00:24:35 - The most dangerous thing in a gym is the instructor
00:25:30 - You can't be a puss all your life
00:25:33 - The key to training
00:27:15 - IAP - Study Mariah Ligget PhD
00:27:53 - '79 Bicep tear and recovery Meltdown in Mississippi
00:31:06 - If you don't have a scare, I don't believe you know what you are doing
00:31:18 - Change deadlift training after a bicep tear?
00:31:38 - '91 Injured out of boredom
00:33:05 - High repetitions
00:34:09 - Never be afraid to look stupid
00:34:28 - How Louie ruptured his patella tendon '91
00:35:00 - Anesthesia death
00:36:00 - Come back to squat the second biggest squat in the world
00:36:17 - Matt Dimel ruptured patella
tendon
00:36:36 - Andy Vale ruptured patella tendon
00:37:00 - Louie's greatest accomplishment
00:38:00 - Recovery Patella Tendon
00:40:34 - Sled dragging
00:43:11 - Knee (p)rehab
00:45:26 - Non-contact injury
00:45:44 - Don't be afraid to make them strong
00:46:05 - Anti-Fragile body
00:47:58 - Hooke's Law of Elasticity
00:48:55 - The body has to be prepared
00:50:35 - Meniscus injury
00:51:36 - Studies
00:52:35 - Inverse curl and rehab
00:53:49 - Healthy hamstrings = healthy knees
00:56:14 - The spine
00:58:39 - The role of the quadriceps in rehab
01:01:46 - (2005) in '93 broke neck because of the bench; Shoulder injury
01:02:57 - Experiment operation
01:03:24 - Shoulder rehab
01:05:40 - Dumbbells
01:06:32 - Bandbell and Rhino bar
01:08:21 - The bandbell adapts to you
01:09:33 - Different grips in the Bamboo bar
01:10:09 - Bamboo bar and fighters
01:10:51 - Isometrics
01:14:11 - Shoulder rehab exercises
01:16:00 - Active vs. passive work
01:17:48 - The hardest thing in sports
01:20:34 - [S]Training
01:22:06 - The most neglected muscle in the body
01:22:45 - Louie's history of recovery
01:25:00 - What drove Louie?
01:27:20 - Too much salt
01:28:04 - You environment
01:29:37 - Read
Pure knowledge. Love these vids. Its like im sitting in a class with the best teacher ever.
guys I can't get enough of these please put up more.
Louie died he can't put anymore up.
This podcast helped tremendously when I injured my back. I was bed ridden for days then weeks and could barely walk but to know that someone was messed up worse than me and fully recovered was exactly what I needed to move forward. Sooooo much knowledge in these podcasts thanks Lou
We're glad to hear you're on track. Stay strong - Westside Barbell
@old man strength put 200 on the machine do 20 reps and do 4-5 sets. Add more reps and sets or weight as it becomes easier
I thank Loui and everybody at Westside for these videos, ton of great information and huge motivation.
I can hear Louie all day. I hope u keep the podcast going. U are my greatest teacher and mentor for me, THANK YOU LOUIE SIMMONS
and all the people that are making the podcast happen, i hope some day you'll be as big JRE.
maybe my favorite video on youtube. So motivational and helpful. I am a university student, but this is by far the most informative and positive 90 minutes I have witnessed.
We appreciate it!
@@WestsideBarbellOfficialI bought the Book of Methods a month ago. A great read! But I would love a book focused on the ways Simmons fights back from injuries. Box squats and Sled drags helped so much for my decrepit knees. Too bad many local gym goers haven't had access to his creativity. My personnel anecdote, after years of struggling with knee pain, I employed sled dragging and cured my Patellofemoral pain syndrome within a month.
That was a great talk. Thanks for making this. RIP Master.
I just want to say thank you another great pod cast. Many years ago Jimmy Sitzer took into the weight room when was inside OSU stadium and helped rehab a shoulder injury. From then I have been on the path of learning and understanding how to rehab injuries.
1:25:48
When he says he went into a meditational state and he went into emptiness, that is nothing to overlook.
says this is ep21 need u guys to upload all the others, cant get enough of his perspectives
Hey there. Try westsidebarbell.podbean.com/ I don't think they were video recording the earlier ones
Thanks man
John Quint for the win!
Amazing info guys, long live louie.
Lol i feel proud i can do those leg curls..ive stayed out the gym over a yesr and squat 405 at about 195lbs bodyweight..my coach learned from westside..best strength training i ever experience
🙏
Watching this build my hope to train again
this man is a fucking legend..we need more content please !
i can't say what is my favorite part, everything louie is my favorite!
Great pod as always!
I cant really hear what Louie says at 58:20, I guess its something with the ankle weights I can hear "i did a "blank" up in the powerrack. Need someone to fill in the blank for me :)
Magne Lonn hes saying he used to do reverse hypers with weights fastened to his ankles, lying across a table or bench...before he built a machine for it
thank for the podcast guys great stuff. keep it up.
32:58 Louis trying hard not to laugh 😂😂
Takeaway, find a way to train around your injuries. Keep pushing it to the limit then back off.
One leg reverse hyper? Awesome!
Im in columbus, can i come just hang with you guys and check out what you do? My body is mostly fucked from scoliosis and martial arts but these normal trainers at the hospitals dont know jack squat and are children in college usually.
41:35 - You can, actually, do standing thigh extensions, with ankle cuff/cable machine. I use it for people with knee problems, works like magic. There's something about doing the knee extension with the hips extended rather than flexed (standard leg extension machine.)
Could you post a video of the wheelbarrow shrug, how it differs from ordinary shrugs?
@old man strength Inherently; no. Being a bonehead about how you load and perform them; yes.
A subluxed SI joint? He dislocated his SI joint? Am I understanding this right? I didn't know the SI joint can do that.
Sounds weird but I thought I did it also....dr said it is a piriformis injury
Badass thoughtful
When it comes to inflammation and injury, where do you stand on that? Shovelling blood through the muscle or trying to get it through the tendon through work will surely increase inflammation and reduce ROM in the short term? Do you just take shit to reduce inflammation or is there a training solution for it?
That's why we stress improving your GPP, doing ultra-high reps with bands, and switching exercises. And also consider your mobility, do not do an exercise that your body isn't ready for yet.
@@WestsideBarbellOfficial thank you
Hey tom, who's the guy sitting next to Louie? I'd like to come see him bc I'm experiencing a lot of issues
Actually just found his TH-cam. It's John quint. Thx for all you guys are doing
Stuart McGill, the world's foremost authority on back pain, advises keeping away from reverse hypers as they can cause serious disc injuries. He recommends spine-sparing exercises like the bird-dog and the side plank.
I've seen quite a few of his interviews and in one he says it's dangerous then in another he says as long as the hips are free swinging (which they are in the reverse hyper) then it can be good. Depending on the case obviously, every back injury is different. So if you want to ignore an exercise that can potentially help u then that's fine too.
@@cnsgains5506 The bird-dog exercise is vastly superior as Dr McGill recommends. Also, Mark Rippetoe of Starting Strength has removed the RH from his gyms as it was damaging the spines.
@@cnsgains5506 He also says he has no business telling someone that’s pain free how to move.
I absolutely love Dr. Stuat McGill and his 40 years of experience. I have all his books and have watched all his interviews. That said, I have been practicing his approach to rehabbing my L5/S1 disc bulge now for over a year. I also see a McGill master clinician who is local to me (not cheap). I am still in pain every day, all day. I am seriously considering purchasing a Westside Barbell Hyperextension machine. At this point in my life and 10 years of suffering from lower back pain... I have nothing to lose.
@@7THxSIGN If the birddog exercise hasn't worked, then the reverse hyper will definitely not work, and in fact, make it worse due to undue shear pressure around the discs (refer to his book Low Back Disorders).
Try alternative methods like trigger point therapy, Active Release therapy, or Prolotherapy which treats injured ligaments via sugar injections.
It amazes me just how butt hurt people get over Loui and Westside. Most of them don’t have a damn clue the knowledge they have.
does that make sense
28:20 bicep story
But what about contact?
I’ll watch this 7-10 times and still not absorb all the information.
Wath exerxises he said to rehsb the back?
Big on high rep (50+) reverse hypers and long light sled pulls (1/4mi +)
That wonky WB is screwing with muh eyes...
Could you talk about exercises for hockey? You talk about football but not hockey. Thanks!!!
sam johnsondees I think squatting westside style carries over very well to skating...
acupuncture doesn't do shit. cmon now
It was a huge letdown to hear Mr. Simmons believes in chiropractic and acupuncture/pressure. Now I can see why some people doubt his methods. Sad.
Y don't chiropractors don't help with back pain?
@@differentvoices6241 is that the set up for a joke or are you genuinely intrigued?
REVERSE HYPERS ARE A NO-NO IF YOU HAVE DISC INJURIES!!
STOP SPREADING MISINFORMATION DUMBASS!!!🤡🤡🤡🤡