Subject: A call to arms—The case for direct arm training

In one of Pavel’s earliest books, he made the case for “anti-isolation” training with a focus on whole body strength exercises using irradiation, and other hard style high tension techniques. This was counterculture to the bodybuilding focus of many routines popular in those days.


Well, it is time to be counterculture again and bring back a bit of “isolation” work and direct arm training.


You read that correctly.

 

Direct arm training.

Aleks Salkin, StrongFirst Certified SFG Level II Instructor, begins:

Over the past few decades there has been a curious trend that has slowly but surely seeped its way into the hearts and minds of an alarming number of iron rats, both professional and recreational alike.


That trend?


The belief that you don’t need to directly train your arms.


The claim goes a little something like this:


Your arms get enough work from compound exercises like pullups, military presses, bench presses, and so on, so why waste valuable training time doing extra exercises for them? Oh, and also direct arm training belongs solely to the vain, bourgeois world of bodybuilding and has no place in the noble tradition of strength training.


Pardon my French, but to that I say au contraire, mon frere (“on the contrary, my brother”).


For starters, we largely ignore similar rationales for avoiding direct ab training by those who claim that your abs get enough work being squeezed hard in squats and deadlifts, so why give this anti-arm training screed even so much as a second thought?


If you care about your strength, you shouldn’t.


Direct arm training has a long and illustrious history among the world’s hardest, most fearsome names in strength—men and women with a hearty respect for the jolly old game of taming iron and a seething, unquenchable hatred for gravity.

Click here to read the article and learn how biceps and curls were part of kettlebell work in the past.


The direct arm work recommended sounds like a great finisher to “The Powertrain” premium practice on the StrongFirst App.