Since February, I’ve exclusively been following PUMP. In late January, I was pushing my training fairly hard, combining aspects of PERFORM and PUMP together. I was really grinding out hypertrophy methods as well as pushing my Oly Lifts and metcons hard. Let me be honest, I was biting off more than I should have been. Yes, it happens to me too. I was having fun and got caught up in the training. Then suddenly, an old achy shoulder that I’ve felt 100’s of times in the past, turned into a pain that stopped me in my tracks.
A couple of weeks off was required to let the inflammation calm down. Then a few more weeks of focused mobility work, physical therapy, and recovery practices helped get me back to being able to train my full body.
But getting out of pain and being able to push in training fully isn’t an on/off switch. It is like a dimmer switch instead. Once you are out of pain, you can turn the dimmer just high enough to see some light. You still have a long way to go before you’re back at full brightness.
Back in 2016, I was recovering from a similar shoulder injury (and my entire CrossFit career). I learned that slow and controlled strength training is the best way to bridge the gap between just coming out of pain and full strength.
You have to develop slow controlled strength, under stable loads, for your brain and muscles to productively coordinate around injuries. Injuries jack up the wiring of our brains and muscles, so we need to start slow to get things working.
PUMP is the perfect place to do that. The focus on both STRENGTH Intensity and Balance under stable loads, with controlled tempos, for moderate to higher reps, is perfect for this. It also just so happens to be the proven method for muscle hypertrophy and building a lean physique. I certainly ain’t mad about either of those.
So I have been fully dedicated to PUMP in these last 3 months. Each week my shoulder has felt progressively better, and I’m able to bring more and more intensity and effort to my training safely. I’ve even gone so far as to swap out some of the PUMP conditioning workouts in favor of even more strength work to build muscle and strength. And since I’m still walking 15k steps a day and doing plenty of timed supersets, I’m getting my cardio and aerobic work in.
I’ll be back to doing Functional Pump Conditioning in the future. But for now I’m really valuing that PUMP is not only making me feel great, but I’m looking great, feeling connected to my diet in a great way, and seeing my strength improve all around.