kfry20 said:
First time posting on this forum, but have been following along the past year or so. Love the discussions on here!
I have been training BJJ coming up on 3 years in March (mostly no-gi) at BVMMA here in BCS with Bubba Bush. I normally train 3x/ week and lift 2x/week, but it has been tough to find the right balance of training intensity so that I still can push myself in the weight room and vice versa. Are y'all following specific lifting programs for BJJ and/or what kind of splits?
Thanks for any advice!
So here's what I've been doing for most weeks, sometimes variables throw things off:
Monday: class at night
Tuesday: rest
Wednesday: class at night
Thursday: rest
Friday: lift in the morning
Saturday: class at noon
Sunday: lift in the morning
I'm 43, almost 44, I'd love to add another class during the week because I enjoy learning and I can use all the help I can get as a white belt but my body doesn't respond well to 2 days of BJJ in a row. I'm jealous of the young guys that can go almost every day, but I just can't do it. I thought I could just get by on class but I could tell I lost some strength when I wasn't lifting. I don't lift heavy, I really can't since I've got something going on in my left shoulder/arm. One of my lifting days is back and biceps, the other is chest, shoulders, and triceps. My knees are bad so I really can't do legs anymore, it puts me in too much pain. I don't know if there's an injury or if I just have arthritis, but I don't have any interest in knee surgery if there is anything going on in there so I just make due.
I have a power rack and other equipment in my basement. I've been using the FitBod app for years, it builds workouts for me since you tell it exactly what equipment you have and what your goals are. I've tried other workout apps and it's the best one IMO. I mainly stick with compound lifts, bench press, incline, overhead press, pullups with different grip variations, different kinds of rows as well. Lower weight with higher volume with my physical limitations.
I've considered BJJ a violent fountain of youth. I hurt pretty good most mornings after I roll, but the positive benefits have been worth every bit of the pain. You just need to find a balance and what works for you.