How To Do A One Arm Push Up: 3 Great Techniques

This years fitness goal was to be able to do a one-leg squat (or pistol squat). After much work on this I am now proud to say that I can do 2 full reps on both legs. It’s still tough as guts though. I’ll write a separate post on how I achieved this later.

My next goal is to do something that I have also wanted to do for a long time, a one arm push up. Just one good solid repetition and I would be happy.

I’ve done a bit of research and so far I’ve found 3 good methods for learning the one arm push up.

The days of 2 arm pushups are numbered

Method 1: Pavel Tsatsouline

The Naked Warrior is one of my favourite books in my fitness book arsenal. It’s very simply laid out with plenty of pictures and great exercise descriptions. Pavel’s witty sense of humour about Soviet training techniques also make this book a good read.

Inside this book Pavel shares his technique on the one arm push up. He suggests adjusting the inline of the pushup. So start off doing a one arm pushup on the wall, then a desk, then a bench, then a low step and then the ground.

Each time you increase the difficulty start by just performing the exercise through the eccentric (or negative/lowering) portion. Include isometric holds at regular intervals. For example, on the way from the top of the motion to the bottom, stop at five sticking points and hold for 10-20 seconds. Relax, reposition yourself at the beginning again and repeat. Check out The Naked Warrior by Pavel Tsatsouline if you’re interested in learning more bodyweight resistance exercises.

Method 2: Rusty Moore

I’m not sure if Rusty came up with this method of progressing to the one arm push up himself or if he found it elsewhere. Either way it looks like a solid technique.

Rusty recommends first being able to master close grip push ups. This gives you the tricep strength to be able to begin learning one arm push ups. For the next step I’ll quote him directly:

One Arm Assisted Push Ups With Basketball: You can use a medicine ball if you have that available as well. What you are going to do here is put as much weight as possible on the hand that is on the ground and another hand on a basketball. Use the had on the basketball to assist you on the way up and the way down. As you get stronger, place that basketball further out to the side of your body away from the center. The further out the ball gets from your body, the less you can assist that working arm. Once you can do 2 sets of 15 reps per arm with very little assistance, it is time to move on to one arm push ups unassisted.

That is without a doubt one of the more clever exercise progressions that I have seen. You can always swap out the basketball for a medicine ball or even something as simple as a step.

Method 3: Peter Carvell

I’m pretty sure this guy is selling something, but this quick 2 minute video gives you full progressive exercises on your way to one arm pushups. Definitely worth a look.

Here is another video I found on Youtube that made me laugh. The guy is in great shape but he spends the full 3 minute video catching his breath from a few 1 arm pushups. This is not how we want to be guys!

I think I’ll use a combo of all three to take small yet often progressions to my ultimate goal. Can you do a one hand pushup? How did you get there?

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Improving Your D&D Attributes: Constitution

What is Constitution?

Dungeons & Dragons: Constitution (or CON) effects how many Hit Points you have, your Fortitude save which is used to resist poisons and the like and the Concentration skill which is often used by spellcasters.

Dictionary:

con·sti·tu·tion –noun
2. the physical character of the body as to strength, health, etc.: He has a strong constitution.

In real life constitution also refers to your healthiness, well being and fortitude. So as you can imagine improving you constitution is a multi-pronged task.

Taking a leaf out of the Dwarven books

The Dwarves short, stout stature naturally gives them a more robust frame, although I’m not really sure what makes them anymore healthy then say an Elf. One thing that Dwarves do have from centuries of mining is Stamina.

The way we build stamina is by repeating an exercise over and over again. High repetition sets, running, swimming and even console gaming (think cramping fingers) all build stamina in that specific task. What we are aiming for however is a general stamina that will allow you to have a great constitution over a range of activities. We do this through a thing called cross-training.

Learn how to build up your Constitution

What I am going to set you up with is a very basic cross-training workout designed to build up your stamina and constitution.

Go to an oval or soccer field to do this workout. Complete all exercises with minimal rest times until you are done. Repeat.

  • Run 1000m
  • 5 pushups
  • Run 500m
  • 10 pushups
  • Run 250m
  • 20 pushups

Feel free to mix up the running with shorter distance sprints (200m, 100m, 50m) or stair runs and change the pushups to body rows, mountains climbers or anything else of your choosing.

Here’s a drill I came up with that’s a little more advanced. Do it once a month to gauge your progress.

Super 7 drill:

Complete as many rounds of the circuit as you can in seven minutes. Complete each exercise for seven reps unless it is a unilateral (one sided) exercise. Then do 14 reps total (7 each side).

  1. Mountain climbers
  2. DB Clean and Press
  3. Renegade rows
  4. Burpees
  5. Butt drops
  6. Pushups
  7. Pullups

Here is an alternate set of seven exercises for beginners:

  1. Mountain climbers
  2. BW Squats
  3. Thigh slaps
  4. Burpees
  5. Russian twist
  6. Pushups on knees
  7. Body rows

7 reasons to improve your CON

  1. Improved circulation
  2. Less chance of heart conditions
  3. Improved lung capacity
  4. More stamina in bed
  5. This kind of training usually also leads to weight loss
  6. Improvement at any sport you play (yes, you will notice improvements, even at chess)
  7. You can throw footballs over mountains… repeatedly

Stay tuned for Part 4: Intelligence.

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Improving Your D&D Attributes: Dexterity

What is dexterity?

In D&D your dexterity affects your balance, speed and reaction time. Dexterity in real life refers to basically the same thing. In fact according to dictionary.com the word dexterity means:

Dexterity
–noun
1. skill or adroitness in using the hands or body; agility.

Becoming elf-like

Training to increase your agility improves most daily activities from sport to shopping to walking with sure footing (which is great if you are into urban exploration). It is also one of the most fun types of skills to improve as increasing your dexterity enables to to achieve amazing feats. [Read more...]

1 Leg Stiff-Legged Deadlift

1 Leg Stiff-Legged Deadlifts help with:

  • Balance
  • Picking up small objects off the floor
  • Posture

What it works:

Hamstrings, Glutes, Calves

How to:

  1. Begin by lifting one foot slightly off the ground
  2. Bend forward at the hips using your other leg to counter balance your movement
  3. Squeeze the glutes and hamstrings as you stand back up straight
  4. Do not touch your other foot to the ground until you complete all of the required repitions

Tips:

  • Remember to bend at the hips NOT the back
  • Only lean forward as far as you can while keeping your back straight