Thanks! I also believe that one of the biggest sell point of my channel is being an honest fitness TH-camr. There aren't a lot of honest fitness TH-camrs left these days.
27 days short of 2 years. This is dedication guys. This video is the most inspirational one, not only because how long it took you to do it, but because of the circumstances you had to surpass as well - 0 push training, short stick arms & not fit shoulders, being a dad and failing your first goal - and you still did it. Mad respect
The fact that you stuck with it for 703 days is awesome! That kind of determination is inspirational since I’ve been working on my pressing strength as well
Geek Climber you're a beast!!! To balance fatherhood, a full-time job, rock climbing, calisthenics, and video editing is extremely hard! Also, your video was funny, well-structured, concise, and clear - I haven't found a single TH-camr who makes this style of video better than you (even though I spend A LOT of time watching this style of video). I definitely learned some valuable points for not only my training, but also my future videos. As for a potential next skill you can train, maybe one that won't injure you as much as the press to handstand :)
Don’t get me wrong geek climber has a great editing style and type of videos but a TH-camr called MBS made a video called “learning the front lever from zero” which was a very greatly edited video that keeps the audience engaged even if they aren’t knowledgeable in calisthenics
Good luck man! I will admit that one of the reason I injured myself so many times is that I want to make a video of me learning it in a short time like "30 days" to go viral, since the longer it takes me to learn the less chance of the video going viral.
@@GeekClimber it's not going to help with the going viral but FWIW the struggle is what I love these videos for. If you can do stuff like that in 30 days it's got to be 80% genetics and natural talent. I want to see the sweat, tears, and dumb mistakes because that is what it takes for the average guy (yours truly) to get it. Three years in and I still can't hold a 60s handstand.
One thing I've noticed in these videos is how much progression you get after having just a single coaching session or sometimes just a conversation with a coach about the problems you're having. I just watched your handstand video and now this one. Obviously hard work and dedication are needed and you have it, but having someone with the knowledge and experience to steer you and correct misconceptions is such a massive help.
This video is a testament to the power of determination and discipline. Your journey to mastering the bent arm press handstand is truly inspiring - keep up the fantastic work!
the fact that you took 703 days is not a point of embarrasment, it's actually one of inspiration! love to see the persistance and dedication. i would still look forward to you trying for the front planche again.
Love that you are talking about the mistakes you made instead of just telling ppl "yeah just do it like this blah,blah". Realy helps with noticing these mistakes on yourself. SO: It took so long to learn this skill so he just became a father in the meantime :D
I like how you keep it real most TH-camrs would show their 1 year transformation from one pull up to one arm front levers and every difficult skill in a short period of time which is for the normal person unthinkable.
We went indoor climbing for the first time. You mostly then magnus inspired us to go. Our kids loved i. I did too. You are getting me to try different movements and see what's possible with practice when it's impossible today. I can finally handstand for 5 seconds. After 5 months of light practice. Your tips were very helpful. Strength side too. The progressive reps and lower intensity is way quicker than just struggle one reps. Once a day, for months.
My favorite part of all these types of videos you make is when you finally succeed and all that hard work/training you performed pays off. It really puts a smile on my face!
15:18 love that this eyebrow raise is basically a stock gif in the Geek Climber universe now :) Also, way to go! The celebration with the baby was such a great moment
As a bigger guy who can barely do 8 pull-ups in a row but can do pushups and presses like these without much difficulty, it was interesting to hear how he didn't get sore this is exactly how I feel when training pulling exercises and I've never heard anyone describe this
I had the same problem with pullups. Corrections- YOU GOTTA RETRACT YOUR SCAPULA WHILE PULLING UP THIS WILL MAKE YOUR SPINE SLIGHTLY BEND AND YOU WILL FEEL YOUR LATS ENGAGED :)
@@davidthomas1424 thank you, I've been trying to reduce my reps and switch to an easier progression like Australian pull-ups and that's been working alot better for me
i really love and enjoy when you say " and this happened" in the end of your videos smashing the target right in the spot. I really hope you do not fall into the "i gotta do it no matter what" trap, but continue to educate and save us great amount of effort to actually walk us through. What you do matters.
Hi Jason, I. Really liked all your honest and detailed explanations. I have been practicing the press to handstand and weight training overhead press. I train with a buddy to ensure safety. I have rigged up a pulley system that straps around my ankles and the weight offsets my bodyweight by 20lbs (started with about 70lbs). Starting in the headstand position, I am close to doing a press to handstand! I am 67 yo and things take a little longer so bags of patience is needed. I have been doing calisthenics for 3 years now and also subscribe to the excellent Calisthenics Movement program. It is great to see your realistic time frame and detailed progress with all the failures along the way. Keep the excellent videos coming please.
You were the guy who taught me to handstand. But I set my sights on this move and made it one of my year's goals for 2022. I don't catch my balance every time but when I do, I can stay there until I get bored
I like your honesty about injuries and mistakes at the beginning in this video. Right now im in the middle of similiar journey with front lever and I have similiar issues with doing dragon flag progressions like you had with pike pushup. I also wanted to go to the next progression as nothing works, but now I feel warned what it can leads to. Thanks!
From my experience, it is easier to start with the tuck pike push up position (similar to tuck planche) and then push your body up to the hand stand position. Once the shoulders get stronger, we can move to adv tuck and then straight legs pike push up position. Good to see you back with this kind of video.
wow.... so, this is what the journey is really like..... thank you for sharing such a detailed video other than just a 7 min video of showing off a fancy workout routine.....
Incredible dedication. Many TH-camrs just set an impossibly short training period, making a video of themselves making absolutely zero progress for some quick clicks. You on the other hand are sticking to it, quietly working on it for almost two years, even through the becoming of a father! Much respect
These videos are what set realistic time frames to the goals we chase. None of that get buff quick shit, anything worth your time will cost you time. Thanks for the great entertainment as well!
ordinary guy, you've inspired me. I get injuries too and I've begun to think I should give it away, but after watching your videos, I'm going to keep going, even though I'm 66.
Loved your honesty with this video. Truly speaks to how difficult much of a challenge physical goals can be, but also how determination and being willing to change your approach can be so important. Thank you!
On top of all the other awsomeness that this video shows - another thing it shows is the importance of a trainer. Just that simple bit of advice from Sondre Berg saved this from being the "I learnt the Bent Arm Press in 1500 days"
This is amazing. Congrats on your persistence! Definitely an inspiration. My progress is really slow (being a woman in her 40s doesn't help) and I have accepted that a lot of what I want to do might take a few years, but it can still be a little demoralizing sometimes.
This was truly one of the most inspiring videos I've ever watched. -- Congratulations on your new baby! But yes, your dedication is admirable. I was so happy for you when you achieved your goal! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾. I know that hard work goes into achieving what you say you want and all too often, I've given up on things way too soon!. Thank you for this video.
your form actually dramatically changed when you recruited your fingers :O it’s here that I realized how your finger injury affected the training… really informative!
Despite the longer time to reach the skill I think this one might be the much more inspiring of your videos. Watching naturally mesomorphic athletes gain very hard skills easily is just unrealistic for most people. And then you wonder what the hell you’re doing wrong when you don’t get the same results. But watching an average guy struggle through the trials and tribulations of life and still persevere, that’s truly inspiring.
Very impressive man. I've been waiting for more then 2 years for thos video. U haven't disappointed. U gave me a lot of inspiration to try and unlock this seemingly impossible skill.
This is a true testimony to consistency, what a great video! Congratulations! I'm going to start trying to get my press to handstand too now, thanks for the inspiration!
Dude your content is so inspiring. Your approach to the problems feels so close to what I think about doing but I just don't apply myself as hard. I really have to commend your effort and I am 100% trying some of your achievements.
Awesome progress! Getting the press handstand feels awesome when you have the regular one on lock. In response to your feeling a lack of control in crow pose; you really have to treat it like an abdominal exercise as much as a training position for your shoulders. Squeezing the abdomen and adjusting the balance point until you can lift up smoothly from that position is no mean feat. The tricky bit is managing shoulder engagement, abdominal strength, and balance. One of the cheats is getting lost in keeping your balance, with the right spot you can stay there forever as a rest position.
Man, this is my first video i am watching on your channel, but with this level of dedication and nice form of content, you got a subscriber for life earned! Btw good luck with your child!
I love this kind of video, I just spent 9 months doing body rows to get stronger scapula/mid-back muscles for the ability to hold my chest to the bar. When starting I was 10cm under the bar with my chest, even though I could do 14 flawless slow full-range pull-ups with my chin far above the bar. I thought I was genetically flawed and that it was impossible for me to do it. But I worked month after month, and when I could do 3 sets of 12 reps body rows with 1-2 sec stop with my chest to the bar I tried again and I was completely elated that I could do it, felt like magic, now I can hold for 10 sec. Now I will practice to do slow muscle ups, will be interesting to see how long it will take. I'm doing false grip pull-ups to strengthen my wrists now, can only do 2 now, started today.
This is impressive AF. Thank you so much for this honest realistic video. I love it. I'm currently learning to do handstand. Not exactly the same....but this vid actually encourages me. Good things take time....
Wonderful display of dedication! GC's discipline is exemplary! This is also convincing evidence, for those who doubted it, "stick arms" are no excuse nor a reason - trust the process!. Very valuable content!
I always value greatly your views and approaches to these as I'm also learning these skills currently working on HSPU and press to HS. Thank you for another great video and keep making great content!
Congrats! Just want to say that i love these videos and i especially like that you share your training routine. I highly value your tips, much more than the tips of the popular calisthenics youtubers because your reasoning of why you do that and this excercise or method is always based on science or logic :)
This is amazing. Thanks for being one of those people who puts out a genuine journey mastering this skill. This will be how 99% of people experience mastering this.
Nice work! There is actually a banded method that works: - 2 bands, one thicker one thinner. - Thick one loops over the pullup bar in a larks head. - Thin one you pull halfway through the hanging end - Your arms go through each loop of the thin band - Thin band ends up at your armpits, with it's loop to your back - Get in tripod pose and put your legs up. Wrap them around the thicker band - Now you can train press handstand & handstand pushups with the band assisting with both weight and stability. Start with heavier bands, progress to lighter bands. You can use a hang-scale to measure the assist.
@@GeekClimber There was a pt2 also. th-cam.com/video/AWTZyaJ4m7k/w-d-xo.html They don't really show it in the videos, but when you wrap your legs around the band, it's important that it's wrapped as low as possible (as close to the foot as possible). This makes it much more stable and prevents you from "slipping through".
Wow, that's pretty creative. Not sure why the calisthenics channels I watched never mentioned this kind of setup, but how does it work if someone accidentally overshoots the handstand balance in this setup? Seems kind of the dangerous because there's no good way to bail. Or is a spotter required for this setup?
One progression I used and love is incorporating a lot of crow pose training. Specifically, training headstand to crow, and crow knee lifts allowed me to have much more control of the balance throughout the whole motion. Plus, it's fun to explore other hand balances that aren't handstand. Using these progressions, I was able to learn L-sit to handstand pretty quickly.
This speaks to me in so many ways, especially all the injuries and attempts at using weights/machines to try and build up strength for this safely. Maybe I’ll try and get back on this journey again (if my shoulder ever properly heals) while learning how you overcame your mistakes and hurdles.
These videos are so exciting and inspiring you are an incredibly impressive and driven person. Thanks for making me want to “Train… and train… and train”.
703 days! This is dedication!!! Love your videos, insights and the impossible skills you finally learn! PS. In fact, I learned the straight arm handstand press first because I'm more flexible and this position felt better for me :D Took a lot of time as well to understand the technique and balance well...
703 is a lot higher of a number than I'm used to seeing in these titles. Immense dedication.
True- and props to geek climber for being honest about his progress!! Truly impressive, keep it up!!
Yeah like 20 times higher
Thanks! I also believe that one of the biggest sell point of my channel is being an honest fitness TH-camr. There aren't a lot of honest fitness TH-camrs left these days.
Finally someone who gives a real number
@@GeekClimberI totally agree there are fitness TH-camrs saying they got from tuck front lever to front lever in 30 Day And we all know cap
27 days short of 2 years. This is dedication guys. This video is the most inspirational one, not only because how long it took you to do it, but because of the circumstances you had to surpass as well - 0 push training, short stick arms & not fit shoulders, being a dad and failing your first goal - and you still did it. Mad respect
*47 days but it's cool
@@dionysianapollomarx Pretty sure it is 27 days
"The only thing I felt in my shoulders was weakness". That was straight to my heart, man 😵
I knew I can't be the only one that experiences this 🤣!
You are not! Also something similar, frog handstand is unnatural to me too. 😂
This is crazy inspiring man.
I just had a kid myself, and the fact that you still find time to train speaks volumes about your character!
I realized kids will imitate what the parents do daily, so an additional motivation to train this at home is to set a good example for my son haha.
@@GeekClimber this is even more motivational than the training itself
Is he a single parent?
@@ceciliai.ogwude2845 when the woman says you must do the night shift with baby and go and work during the day. No time to breathe 😂
@@MrSagsta lol....
The fact that you stuck with it for 703 days is awesome! That kind of determination is inspirational since I’ve been working on my pressing strength as well
You got this!
@@GeekClimber acc. To u what wud be the pre requisites for a planche pushup ?
Geek Climber you're a beast!!! To balance fatherhood, a full-time job, rock climbing, calisthenics, and video editing is extremely hard! Also, your video was funny, well-structured, concise, and clear - I haven't found a single TH-camr who makes this style of video better than you (even though I spend A LOT of time watching this style of video). I definitely learned some valuable points for not only my training, but also my future videos. As for a potential next skill you can train, maybe one that won't injure you as much as the press to handstand :)
Don’t get me wrong geek climber has a great editing style and type of videos but a TH-camr called MBS made a video called “learning the front lever from zero” which was a very greatly edited video that keeps the audience engaged even if they aren’t knowledgeable in calisthenics
Thanks for sharing the video. It was pretty good 👍
Good luck man! I will admit that one of the reason I injured myself so many times is that I want to make a video of me learning it in a short time like "30 days" to go viral, since the longer it takes me to learn the less chance of the video going viral.
@@GeekClimber it's not going to help with the going viral but FWIW the struggle is what I love these videos for. If you can do stuff like that in 30 days it's got to be 80% genetics and natural talent. I want to see the sweat, tears, and dumb mistakes because that is what it takes for the average guy (yours truly) to get it. Three years in and I still can't hold a 60s handstand.
@@GeekClimberbro I just subbed for your dedication, this is truly inspiring
One thing I've noticed in these videos is how much progression you get after having just a single coaching session or sometimes just a conversation with a coach about the problems you're having. I just watched your handstand video and now this one. Obviously hard work and dedication are needed and you have it, but having someone with the knowledge and experience to steer you and correct misconceptions is such a massive help.
This video is a testament to the power of determination and discipline. Your journey to mastering the bent arm press handstand is truly inspiring - keep up the fantastic work!
If he would actually just commit to building more muscle and increase his ohp, he would have gotten the bent arm press in few months
the fact that you took 703 days is not a point of embarrasment, it's actually one of inspiration! love to see the persistance and dedication. i would still look forward to you trying for the front planche again.
Congratulations bro the dedication and discipline you have is unbeliveable
This is absolutely impressive! Training for 703 and not giving up shows what kind of commitment you have...
Love that you are talking about the mistakes you made instead of just telling ppl "yeah just do it like this blah,blah". Realy helps with noticing these mistakes on yourself.
SO: It took so long to learn this skill so he just became a father in the meantime :D
I like how you keep it real most TH-camrs would show their 1 year transformation from one pull up to one arm front levers and every difficult skill in a short period of time which is for the normal person unthinkable.
We went indoor climbing for the first time. You mostly then magnus inspired us to go. Our kids loved i. I did too. You are getting me to try different movements and see what's possible with practice when it's impossible today. I can finally handstand for 5 seconds. After 5 months of light practice. Your tips were very helpful. Strength side too.
The progressive reps and lower intensity is way quicker than just struggle one reps. Once a day, for months.
That's awesome to know! Thanks for sharing!
I think you've lost the ability to call yourself a guy with stick arms :)
Well done! You are a real inspiration!
Amazing!
nice
Thanks a lot for the support!
This video is a nice exposition of the importance of having a base conditioning and strength before trying more advanced skills.
My favorite part of all these types of videos you make is when you finally succeed and all that hard work/training you performed pays off. It really puts a smile on my face!
15:18 love that this eyebrow raise is basically a stock gif in the Geek Climber universe now :)
Also, way to go! The celebration with the baby was such a great moment
🤣🤣 I am probably using that old stock footage a bit too much
I love how he was able to ask for help and take advice from others, many people hold back from doing that and end up missing out on so much knowledge.
As a bigger guy who can barely do 8 pull-ups in a row but can do pushups and presses like these without much difficulty, it was interesting to hear how he didn't get sore this is exactly how I feel when training pulling exercises and I've never heard anyone describe this
Have you tried pulling more exclusively? Drop your sets even to 1-3 reps, but emphasise pulling higher, with stronger/better form .
I had the same problem with pullups.
Corrections-
YOU GOTTA RETRACT YOUR SCAPULA WHILE PULLING UP
THIS WILL MAKE YOUR SPINE SLIGHTLY BEND AND YOU WILL FEEL YOUR LATS ENGAGED :)
@@davidthomas1424 thank you, I've been trying to reduce my reps and switch to an easier progression like Australian pull-ups and that's been working alot better for me
You’re fantastic! To stick to something for so long despite all your frustrations is really inspiring.
i really love and enjoy when you say " and this happened" in the end of your videos smashing the target right in the spot.
I really hope you do not fall into the "i gotta do it no matter what" trap, but continue to educate and save us great amount of effort to actually walk us through. What you do matters.
Thank you for sharing your experience! Great video! Greetings from 🇨🇱
Hi Jason, I. Really liked all your honest and detailed explanations. I have been practicing the press to handstand and weight training overhead press. I train with a buddy to ensure safety. I have rigged up a pulley system that straps around my ankles and the weight offsets my bodyweight by 20lbs (started with about 70lbs). Starting in the headstand position, I am close to doing a press to handstand! I am 67 yo and things take a little longer so bags of patience is needed. I have been doing calisthenics for 3 years now and also subscribe to the excellent Calisthenics Movement program. It is great to see your realistic time frame and detailed progress with all the failures along the way. Keep the excellent videos coming please.
I am in complete awe at your perseverance, dedication and ultimate success. 👏
You were the guy who taught me to handstand. But I set my sights on this move and made it one of my year's goals for 2022. I don't catch my balance every time but when I do, I can stay there until I get bored
It was great overall you did my day ;) I loved it all
Glad you liked the video, and thanks a lot for the support!
"The only thing i felt in my shoulder is weakness" so real bro
Love this type of video where you show your honest journey to accomplishing a calisthenics goal!
I like your honesty about injuries and mistakes at the beginning in this video. Right now im in the middle of similiar journey with front lever and I have similiar issues with doing dragon flag progressions like you had with pike pushup. I also wanted to go to the next progression as nothing works, but now I feel warned what it can leads to. Thanks!
From my experience, it is easier to start with the tuck pike push up position (similar to tuck planche) and then push your body up to the hand stand position.
Once the shoulders get stronger, we can move to adv tuck and then straight legs pike push up position. Good to see you back with this kind of video.
wow.... so, this is what the journey is really like..... thank you for sharing such a detailed video other than just a 7 min video of showing off a fancy workout routine.....
Incredible dedication. Many TH-camrs just set an impossibly short training period, making a video of themselves making absolutely zero progress for some quick clicks. You on the other hand are sticking to it, quietly working on it for almost two years, even through the becoming of a father! Much respect
Congratulations on becoming a father! This is your craziest video yet imo, mega dedication! Keep up the hard work and never stop inspiring us!!!!
"Training non-optinally is better than not training"
Awesome work! This is inspiring
Respect!
The point about the wrists at 10:50 changed everything for me. Thanks a lot!
These videos are what set realistic time frames to the goals we chase. None of that get buff quick shit, anything worth your time will cost you time. Thanks for the great entertainment as well!
YES!!! IV BEEN WAITING SO LONG FOR A NEW PROGRESS VIDEO
ordinary guy, you've inspired me. I get injuries too and I've begun to think I should give it away, but after watching your videos, I'm going to keep going, even though I'm 66.
I think your honesty and authenticity are impressive :) Always happy when there is a new video of you.
Loved your honesty with this video. Truly speaks to how difficult much of a challenge physical goals can be, but also how determination and being willing to change your approach can be so important. Thank you!
On top of all the other awsomeness that this video shows - another thing it shows is the importance of a trainer. Just that simple bit of advice from Sondre Berg saved this from being the "I learnt the Bent Arm Press in 1500 days"
This is amazing. Congrats on your persistence! Definitely an inspiration. My progress is really slow (being a woman in her 40s doesn't help) and I have accepted that a lot of what I want to do might take a few years, but it can still be a little demoralizing sometimes.
This is one of the most inspiring things I have seen. I have deep respect for you
Huge respect for all the invaluable information spread out across these videos
The dedication on creating this video over that space of time is inspiring. Keep it up
I'm amazed. Finally an honest esteem of the days needed. Two years instead of a week? Finally.
this dudes awesome so much dedication
Great dedication. Also, love that Brooke Raboutou is just in the bg in the first 20 seconds of the video.
This video is pure gold, in so many ways. Fantastic dedication to a seemingly impossible goal, and a fantastic "journal" of the journey.
This is the definition of persevering, your journey is an example for us all.
congratulations man. i was also kinda frustrated with my progress but this makes me wanna go at it again
This was truly one of the most inspiring videos I've ever watched. -- Congratulations on your new baby! But yes, your dedication is admirable. I was so happy for you when you achieved your goal! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾. I know that hard work goes into achieving what you say you want and all too often, I've given up on things way too soon!. Thank you for this video.
Amazing dedication! Congrats!
love your channel so much. 703 is sheer dedication, super inspiring
your form actually dramatically changed when you recruited your fingers :O it’s here that I realized how your finger injury affected the training… really informative!
Wow, this is definitely the best explanation of how to train this movement. Incredible work and film 👏👏👏
your struggles and persistence to learn advanced skills makes you one of the most motivating and inspirational youtubers, thanks your hard work
Despite the longer time to reach the skill I think this one might be the much more inspiring of your videos. Watching naturally mesomorphic athletes gain very hard skills easily is just unrealistic for most people. And then you wonder what the hell you’re doing wrong when you don’t get the same results. But watching an average guy struggle through the trials and tribulations of life and still persevere, that’s truly inspiring.
Good job man!
Very impressive man.
I've been waiting for more then 2 years for thos video. U haven't disappointed. U gave me a lot of inspiration to try and unlock this seemingly impossible skill.
This is a true testimony to consistency, what a great video! Congratulations! I'm going to start trying to get my press to handstand too now, thanks for the inspiration!
Dude your content is so inspiring. Your approach to the problems feels so close to what I think about doing but I just don't apply myself as hard. I really have to commend your effort and I am 100% trying some of your achievements.
Omg hats off to you after all the injuries still sticking to it 🎉
You have the best progress videos on youtube hands down. You're honest, informative, entertaining, and clearly dedicated. 703 days is crazy.
I appreciate your commitment and this video. I am 51 and just begining this process.
Inspirational dedication. Congrats.
Awesome progress! Getting the press handstand feels awesome when you have the regular one on lock.
In response to your feeling a lack of control in crow pose; you really have to treat it like an abdominal exercise as much as a training position for your shoulders. Squeezing the abdomen and adjusting the balance point until you can lift up smoothly from that position is no mean feat. The tricky bit is managing shoulder engagement, abdominal strength, and balance. One of the cheats is getting lost in keeping your balance, with the right spot you can stay there forever as a rest position.
Unbelievably inspiring. Liked, shared, subscribed, added to favourites. Everything. Genuinely thank you.
You're underrated dude. 703 days is such a long long time. I'm wishing this video blows up as a reward for your dedication
Man, this is my first video i am watching on your channel, but with this level of dedication and nice form of content, you got a subscriber for life earned! Btw good luck with your child!
I love this kind of video, I just spent 9 months doing body rows to get stronger scapula/mid-back muscles for the ability to hold my chest to the bar. When starting I was 10cm under the bar with my chest, even though I could do 14 flawless slow full-range pull-ups with my chin far above the bar. I thought I was genetically flawed and that it was impossible for me to do it. But I worked month after month, and when I could do 3 sets of 12 reps body rows with 1-2 sec stop with my chest to the bar I tried again and I was completely elated that I could do it, felt like magic, now I can hold for 10 sec. Now I will practice to do slow muscle ups, will be interesting to see how long it will take. I'm doing false grip pull-ups to strengthen my wrists now, can only do 2 now, started today.
this is very inspiring, I've been stuck in the same progression as you, I'll start to implement your suggestions in the next trainings!
killing it dude. this is now my personal goal. great stuff
bro that tip about moving the weight to my fingers instantly helped me thanks so much
I kept thinking I would stop the video but I just couldn’t. Great content.
This is impressive AF. Thank you so much for this honest realistic video. I love it. I'm currently learning to do handstand. Not exactly the same....but this vid actually encourages me. Good things take time....
Wonderful display of dedication! GC's discipline is exemplary! This is also convincing evidence, for those who doubted it, "stick arms" are no excuse nor a reason - trust the process!. Very valuable content!
I always value greatly your views and approaches to these as I'm also learning these skills currently working on HSPU and press to HS. Thank you for another great video and keep making great content!
You are a hero. Congratulations on your baby boy!
Congrats! Just want to say that i love these videos and i especially like that you share your training routine. I highly value your tips, much more than the tips of the popular calisthenics youtubers because your reasoning of why you do that and this excercise or method is always based on science or logic :)
This is amazing. Thanks for being one of those people who puts out a genuine journey mastering this skill. This will be how 99% of people experience mastering this.
YAY now the advanced tuck planche is finally the next video!
It’s inspiring to see a 2 year journey for a skill. None of the experts share their journey like this.
the dedication is insane !
Nice work! There is actually a banded method that works:
- 2 bands, one thicker one thinner.
- Thick one loops over the pullup bar in a larks head.
- Thin one you pull halfway through the hanging end
- Your arms go through each loop of the thin band
- Thin band ends up at your armpits, with it's loop to your back
- Get in tripod pose and put your legs up. Wrap them around the thicker band
- Now you can train press handstand & handstand pushups with the band assisting with both weight and stability.
Start with heavier bands, progress to lighter bands. You can use a hang-scale to measure the assist.
That's what I used when I wanted to do handstand pushups with extended ROM (on a pair of boxes) but it was too heavy for my shoulders.
Thanks for sharing but not sure if I am imagining the described setup right. Would love to see a picture or video if you have one!
@@GeekClimber Here's a video by CrossFit when they are showing how to use this system. th-cam.com/video/i5mUXZPjcGs/w-d-xo.html
@@GeekClimber There was a pt2 also.
th-cam.com/video/AWTZyaJ4m7k/w-d-xo.html
They don't really show it in the videos, but when you wrap your legs around the band, it's important that it's wrapped as low as possible (as close to the foot as possible). This makes it much more stable and prevents you from "slipping through".
Wow, that's pretty creative. Not sure why the calisthenics channels I watched never mentioned this kind of setup, but how does it work if someone accidentally overshoots the handstand balance in this setup? Seems kind of the dangerous because there's no good way to bail. Or is a spotter required for this setup?
dude you're such a dork but also such an inspiration! Thank you for this video
My respect to you. In my opinion, many others including me does not have the will power like yours. Really respect you bro. Keep it up 👍
One progression I used and love is incorporating a lot of crow pose training. Specifically, training headstand to crow, and crow knee lifts allowed me to have much more control of the balance throughout the whole motion. Plus, it's fun to explore other hand balances that aren't handstand. Using these progressions, I was able to learn L-sit to handstand pretty quickly.
This speaks to me in so many ways, especially all the injuries and attempts at using weights/machines to try and build up strength for this safely. Maybe I’ll try and get back on this journey again (if my shoulder ever properly heals) while learning how you overcame your mistakes and hurdles.
You are by far the most impressive fitness youtuber I know. And the funniest! :)
Wow, thank you so much for sharing the reality of what it takes to learn these skills.
this video has an incredible amount of information thank you so much for your dedication
Man, you are such an inspiration, cheers to you!
you are awesome what a positive attitude in every youtube video you make you never give up keep up the great work
So happy for you man!
These videos are so exciting and inspiring you are an incredibly impressive and driven person. Thanks for making me want to “Train… and train… and train”.
703 days! This is dedication!!! Love your videos, insights and the impossible skills you finally learn!
PS. In fact, I learned the straight arm handstand press first because I'm more flexible and this position felt better for me :D Took a lot of time as well to understand the technique and balance well...
Your baby is like "damn, dad is a badass". Great job as always and thank you for sharing your journey with us!