Thanks! I'm thinking about it. Not sure I want that accountability.J-Madd wrote:
Welcome to the forum Satchmo. Are you going to keep a training log?

Thanks! I'm thinking about it. Not sure I want that accountability.J-Madd wrote:
Welcome to the forum Satchmo. Are you going to keep a training log?
Hah, holy crap, I grew up in Tassiematt76 wrote:Hi all.
My name is Matt and I'm from Tasmania, Australia. Great to be part of this forum (it's my first one).
I am also from tassie, but haven't lived there for 8 years due to joining the army. My immediate family is still down that way. I got out earlier this year and posted in a base building thread you started in regards to giving you a heads up re: the fitness for army.Crepsucule wrote:Hah, holy crap, I grew up in Tassiematt76 wrote:Hi all.
My name is Matt and I'm from Tasmania, Australia. Great to be part of this forum (it's my first one).![]()
Hey all,
I'm Dane, 25 and a Detainee Service Officer in Aus Immigration Detention (Think prison officer with no actual powers, woo hoo). I'm currently applying for a Medical Technician job with the Aus Army, passed all of the application process but no billets open until at least June 17, able to pass all of the basics to get in but aiming to smoke the BFA (Basic Fitness requirements at all times after basic) before I go in. Shift worker in a small town with limited access to a gym and TB seems like a great fit and makes a helluva lot of sense so jumping in with both feet.
Nice to meet ya all
Welcome Stefan! I've been there with the S&S brother. It's a nice little GPP program with some positives, but slightly (!) exaggerated in terms of the real world end results it'll bring you.Stefan Olsson wrote:Greetings!
My name is Stefan, 33 years old swede. Been training since late 90´s. At that time thaiboxning and Krav Maga. Started training powerlifting-ish in around 2008 and got much stronger. Weighted in at 95kg. The lifts were SQ 145kg x 5, BP 115kg x 1, DL 180kg x 5. My goal became lifting heavy despite the form was lacking (you have heard it before). Long story short, I got injured in my lower back, lost my passion for powerlifting, started trail running, lost 15kg of bw (muscle.) Last year I ran 4 half-marathons, and a couple of 10k races.
Realized I had to do something weight training related so I started with kettlebells, noticed some strength gains, and foremost swings worked for my back. I have tried to incorporate deadlifts again from scratch several times but it seems impossible. Started doing S&S, registered on StrongFirst forum and thought (I wanted to believe them) S&S would make me bullet proof. It did not.
I don't like whom I´ve become. Now I am that skinny-fat who can run a half-marathon any given day but struggle with 80kg in the bench, a weight I used to max rep for close to 20 reps. I want to be strong again, I want to be complete. Bought the kindle versions of TBI and TBII and loved them! I feel it was written for me!
Thank you!Aelian wrote: Welcome Stefan! I've been there with the S&S brother. It's a nice little GPP program with some positives, but slightly (!) exaggerated in terms of the real world end results it'll bring you.
Welcome Uwe!uwewhttp wrote:Greetings all!
My name is Uwe, I am 51 years old, German and work at a desk. Time and effort I put into physical training were on decline
for the last 4 to 5 years so in September 16 I decided I needed a restart. I took up a runinng (or in my case jogging) programm
and announced to my kids (cause they won't let me off the hook) that I will take our version of the Adult Fitness Test during 2017.
When I was searching for a way to integrate other fitness domains (strength, SE etc.) into my training, someone pointed me to TB.
Exaxtly what I was looking for. So after finishing the running program in February, I am going to start my first Base Building
or maybe Grouchchy's pre-Base-Building. Til then, I will add Fighter template strength training to my jogging.
Regards,
uwe