Daily minimalist routine: 3 movements, 20 minutes, real results
One-Arm Pull-Up: A Realistic Assessment
After three years of training, with the one-arm pull-up as a long-term goal, here's my honest assessment of where it stands and what I've learned.
The one-arm pull-up requires, at minimum, 15 solid pull-ups with full range of motion, excellent lat-bicep connection, and several months of specific unilateral preparation. Most online timelines dramatically underestimate this.
The path I'm following: archer rows (5 each side), one-arm negatives on a bar with band assistance, and towel pull-ups for grip development. I also do single-arm hangs for time. These three tools in combination are the most evidence-based preparation I've found.
The anthropometry matters more than in any other calisthenics skill. Longer arms mean a longer moment arm, which means a harder one-arm pull-up for the same muscle mass. Short-armed trainees have a genuine advantage. This isn't an excuse — just a context for calibrating timeline expectations.
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