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Surviving Max Effort Day
I wasn’t feeling that great and should have known better. I
didn’t sleep that well the night before and had been stressed out
of my mind all day. I had a million things to do and barely had time to
eat since breakfast. By the time my workout rolled around shortly after
6pm, I was shot. I thought about just putting my workout off until
tomorrow. That would have been the smart thing to do. Unfortunately my
training partners arrived and cranked up the music and started to talk
some trash. I tried to fight it for a few minutes, “You
don’t have it in you today,” I told myself. “Be
smart.” Suddenly the sound of my own internal voice was drowned
out by Marilyn Manson screaming through the speakers, “You
can’t save yourself…”
Ah fuck it, I’m in.
After warming up we got started on three board presses. Although I
tried to get psyched and do my best to perform, every rep was looking
worse and worse. I knew I wasn’t going to be setting any
PR’s that day but I at least wanted to put up a respectable
number. Finally, after a long bout of self inflicted verbal abuse, I
decided to try and at least tie my old 3 board PR. As I prepped for the
attempt I noticed a slight twinge in my shoulder. I examined it closer
and poked around a bit. It didn’t feel quite right. But it was
too late; I had requested the weight and couldn’t look like a
pussy and back out now. I got under the bench and somehow managed to
successfully lockout the weight. It wasn’t pretty but I got it. I
checked out my shoulder again and luckily it was no worse than it was
thirty seconds earlier. I continued to massage it as I watched my
partners finish their last attempts.
When everyone had finished I approached the rack to grab a pair of
dumbbells for my assistance work. As I glanced around the room,
something caught my eye. Someone who didn’t belong had entered
the premises. It was the girl from the yoga studio next door.
“What the hell is she doing here and what could she possibly
want,” I wondered. “Turn down the music,” she yelled.
Angrily, I obliged. Then she said it was still too loud and was
disturbing them next door. I nodded and she left. “Motherless
fuck-ing bitch!” I screamed to anyone and no one all at once.
“Throw two tens on that fucking bar!” My training partners
looked puzzled. I couldn’t wait for them to figure it out so I
grabbed them myself and got under the bar. “Someone give me a
fucking spot!” I yelled. I unracked the weight, hit the boards
and absolutely smoked it. After that we all had a good laugh and the
rest of my workout was amazing.
The next morning the adrenaline had worn off and it felt like my
shoulder had fallen off. No worries, I called up my ART specialist and
scheduled a treatment. That and a few days of ice should take care of
it. After a few days it started to get better and I started to think I
was in the clear…Fast forward to the following max effort day.
As I approach 90% I notice that my shoulder is starting to hurt again
but I keep going. Finally I grind out what happens to be a new PR.
Feeling great, I decide to take one more attempt. My buddy Mark tells
me it’s not worth it and that I have absolutely nothing left.
“There’s not a shot in hell you’re getting more than
that,” he informs me. I think about it for a second and decide
that he is right. I pace around for a few minutes and all of the
sudden, SNAP! I do my usual Jekyll and Hyde routine and remember what
Tom Cruise taught us all who were fortunate enough to grow up in the
eighties and watch Risky Business on the big screen, “Sometimes
you just to have to say what the fuck?” And that’s what I
did. I slapped another ten pounds on the bar and got it; a new PR.
During the next few days my shoulder continued to get worse. The
following Monday I couldn’t even bench 185 so I did speed presses
off two boards. I skipped max effort day that week and had to move up
to three boards for the following speed day. The next week it was four
boards. After two weeks off of max effort work I decided to test it. I
did a five board press and promised myself that I would stay light. I
broke that promise. After hitting 500, I called it a day. “Wow,
doesn’t even feel that bad,” I thought.
Of course, we all know how this story ends. I haven’t pressed
since and I am now in need of an MRI to see determine if there is a
rotator cuff tear. I probably won’t be pressing heavy weights for
quite a while.
The sad part about all this is that I always preach not training to
failure and never attempting a weight you are not sure you will get on
a max effort day. There is no point in doing either as it leads to CNS
burnout and injuries. None of my athletes are ever allowed to do this.
Unfortunately for me, I didn’t take my own advice. In fact, this
wasn’t the first time I have pushed myself too far on max effort
days. The truth is that I do it almost on a routine basis. It’s
just something about me, it’s in my blood and I can’t
control it. I only have two speeds; full blast, balls to the wall, out
of control or off. There is no in between with me. That is something
that I have yet learned to control.

Gettysburg Football team captain follows the old hardcore gym mantra,
squat til your eyes bleed. The result of a rock bottom triple with 455.
Last summer I had one thirty minute block in the middle of the day to
train. This is usually all I get in the summer because that is my
busiest season training athletes. I got a bit behind schedule and
before I knew it, thirty minutes had been reduced to twenty. I was
determined that I would do rack pulls that day come hell or high water.
The problem is I have two herniated disks from a bad skiing accident a
few years ago and have to be extremely careful and always be sure to do
an extensive warm up regimen. A sane person would have opted for some
glute ham raises and hypers but I, on the other hand, decided that I
could get my warm up and max effort rack pulls in all in the span of
twenty minutes. At right around the eighteen minute mark, I pulled 585
and it felt like my back broke. I rested and stretched a few minutes
and actually decided to throw another plate on. I did it again and
wasn’t able to squat or dead lift until December.
The moral to the story is this; it doesn’t really make the
slightest bit of difference what you do on a close grip fat bar four
board press with chains on a random Tuesday night in January. That is
not what matters in the end. The goal is for your bench press to go up.
Every max effort day does not have to be an all out battle to the
death. You want to strain and you want to work with weights over 90%
but you have to be smart and be safe. The only way you can continue to
break records and up your weights is if you are healthy. If you are
constantly on the shelf with an injury you have defeated the purpose.
No one gets stronger when they are hurt.

42 year old metal maniac prepares for a heavy set of 395.
For now, I am trying to take Jim’s advice of staying calm when I
train and keeping it on cruise control. Of course, you do want to push
yourself. And some days you have to push yourself harder than others.
Sometimes we all have to test ourselves and take it all the way to the
edge. The key is to avoid falling off.
Train smart.

Or you may end up like this lunatic.
Jason Ferruggia
Performance Enhancement Specialist
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