Building explosive power in calisthenics: clapping push-ups and more
Training Log: What to Track and Why
Keeping a training log is one of the most valuable habits in calisthenics and one of the most commonly skipped. Here's a simple system that takes 2 minutes per session.
What to record: date, exercises performed, sets/reps or hold times, and a subjective quality score (1-5). That's it. No elaborate spreadsheets required.
Why it matters: without data, you can't identify plateaus. A plateau is invisible if you don't have records — you might assume you're progressing when you've been doing identical sessions for three months. The log exposes this immediately.
What to look for: are hold times going up week over week? Are rep counts increasing? If neither is moving, something needs to change — more volume, harder variation, more recovery, or a different approach.
Secondary benefit: the log provides motivation context. Reading back through three months of sessions reminds you how far you've come, especially during periods when progress feels slow.
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