The one upper body exercise to rule them all!
dbmata
Posts: 12,950 Member
This is a simple thought experiment thread. What is potentially the one upper body exercise that could create the strength the average person needed for daily life?
I was thinking pullups, but that's mostly back and tri.
I'm not sure on this one.
I was thinking pullups, but that's mostly back and tri.
I'm not sure on this one.
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Replies
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Upper body leaves out too much of your posterior chain.
In my opinion, deadlifts would be the single exercise to create the most strength, and picking something heavy up off of the ground is a natural used movement pattern that many people would benefit from training.0 -
I agree. Deadlifts.0
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Pushups. Otherwise, after sex you have to lay there until she pushes you back up.0
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I think the push up... given the sheer number of variations and ability to add weight...0
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Pushups. Otherwise, after sex you have to lay there until she pushes you back up.
Depends on the position, right?0 -
Pushups. Otherwise, after sex you have to lay there until she pushes you back up.
Whoa, this got creepy way fast.0 -
Hahahaha, and you can do pushups in different orientations.
While the DL is may favorite single exercise, it's dq'ed, it's not upper body specific.0 -
Deadlift is a good candidate, helps build traps and upper back as well as hips, quads, hammies, lower back. The Squat should be considered as well. Try holding a heavy barbell on your back if you have a weak upper body, not gonna workout too well. If strictly an upper body exercise I think the Dip would have to be one of the top candidates. It's more challenging than the push-up, by far.0
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I think I'd *almost* go so far as to allow the dip and pushup to be viewed as the same, as the pushup could be argued as a dip variant, and vice versa.0
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Deadlift.
I'd pair it with something like the push press (if I can cheat and sneak in a second exercise?)
You could build a pretty good programme around those two...0 -
Ok, I've never seen the DL listed as an upper body specific. If you can show me that. We're done here, because the deadlift wins hands down.
Maybe create a "deadlift / that's my wife" variant, where you pull the weight, then throw it at someone to get a full push/pull cycle.0 -
Pushups. Otherwise, after sex you have to lay there until she pushes you back up.
Depends on the position, right?
Hahaha that didn't take long!0 -
if strictly upper body focused, then i would say Pendlay Rows..... builds Back/Bicep/Core/Hams/Glutes.0
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I would think that power clean and press, or push press or jerk is the number one exercise even though some people might consider it two exercises. I got my first weight set at 13 years old. We didn't know anything about exercise. We just would try to lift as much as we could over our heads. Within a few months my brother and I and a few of our friends could lift our weight over our heads and it wasn't long before we could press our weight. Before I finished the 8th grade I could press my own weight 10 times. I'm not recommending it but I think you could develop a good body by just doing clean and jerks for reps. I would recommend doing clean and press and then push press and finally jerks as the weight and or reps go up. I had a goal of lifing my bodyweight sixty times in sixty minutes on my sixtieth birthday but I failed miserably. Maybe next year if I lose about 30 pounds I'll be able to. I do think dead lifts for reps are a good exercise but I think power cleans are better.0
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standing military press, this is an obvious choice.0
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Upper body leaves out too much of your posterior chain.
In my opinion, deadlifts would be the single exercise to create the most strength, and picking something heavy up off of the ground is a natural used movement pattern that many people would benefit from training.
Agreed.
I catch myself deadlifting anytime I have to pick something up off the floor now.0 -
Pushups. Otherwise, after sex you have to lay there until she pushes you back up.
Whoa, this got creepy way fast.
I could say another upper body exercise is one of my favorites. It is one I do alone when the mood strikes.0 -
Push ups with lots of variation - wides, diamond (narrow), one arm, raised, lowered, etc.0
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What is potentially the one upper body exercise that could create the strength the average person needed for daily life?
It's like asking which food contains every nutrient we need. It's the wrong question to ask. There are 3 major upper body movements - pushing, pulling, and overhead lifting.. and it's tough to combine them, so i would do 3 exercises at a bare minimum. If the person leads an otherwise sedentary lifestyle, i would add a torso rotation or anti-rotation exercise, since that's an essential neuromuscular skill in daily life.0
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