The Axis Method

John Parker

The Axis Method Podcast explores intelligent strength training, functional health, and performance-based lifestyle design. Hosted by strength coach John Parker, the show focuses on building real-world strength through the Minimum Effective Dose (MED) philosophy. Episodes cover kettlebells, band training, rucking, recovery, supplementation, mindset, and integrating fitness into everyday life. Proudly supported by its first sponsor, Harambe System. Train with intention. Build strength for life.

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  1. 4 NGÀY TRƯỚC

    EP. 09 - Breaking the Mold: Training, Career Paths & Finding Your Own Way with Mike from Hybrid Resistance

    “At some point, training stops being about proving yourself… and starts becoming about building a life you can actually sustain.” Most people enter fitness chasing aesthetics—bigger lifts, more muscle, better numbers. But if you stay in it long enough, the conversation changes. You start asking different questions: How do I keep training hard without destroying my joints?How do I make strength fit into real life?What happens when your interests evolve?Can you build a career in fitness without getting trapped by the industry?In Episode 9 of The Axis Method, I sat down with Mike from Hybrid Resistance to talk about the evolution of training, identity, and building your own path in strength & conditioning. Mike has lived through multiple eras of the fitness industry: bodybuilding culturecorrective exercisefunctional traininghome gym evolutiononline coachingcontent creationhigher educationhybrid training systemsAnd unlike many online voices, his philosophy wasn’t built on trends—but decades of experimentation. This episode is sponsored by Harambe System — a variable resistance platform that’s become a core part of my training. It bridges the gap between bands and weights, giving consistent tension through a full range of motion without the same joint stress. If your goal is to build strength while staying pain-free long-term, it’s one of the best tools I’ve used. HarambeSystem.com/JohnParkerBallistic Bodybuilding culture and early gym influenceTraining as identity and expressionWhy some people fall in love with lifting“Some people view training as a chore. Others feel drawn to it.” NASM, ACSM, CHEK InstituteFunctional training and corrective exerciseLearning before social media“You can survive sloppy training in your twenties. Eventually your body sends the bill.” Beyond gym trainer vs influencerBuilding alternative pathsOnline coaching, education, and niche communities“Your niche should come from genuine interest—not forced branding.” Why convenience drives consistencyEssential vs overrated equipmentReducing friction in trainingThe best setup is the one you’ll actually use. Auto-regulationRotating vs abandoning movementsLetting training evolve with your life“The goal isn’t to prove loyalty to a method. The goal is to stay capable.” Less ego liftingMore precision and awarenessFocus on repeatability and recovery“Training should feel more like practice—and less like punishment.” Your training should fit your life—not compete with itConsistency matters more than noveltyReduce friction to improve adherenceAdvanced training requires awareness, not punishmentGood coaches evolve over timeThere’s no single path in fitnessMike represents something rare in fitness: Someone willing to evolve. No tribalism. No fake certainty. No pretending one method solves everything. Just years of experimentation and building something that actually works. And that’s what StrengthAxis has become about too: Not chasing extremes— but building strength that lasts. CONTACT: Mike / Hybrid Resistance YouTube: Hybrid Resistance Instagram: @hybridresistance StrengthAxis Articles & Membership Podcast: https://strengthaxis.substack.com/podcast YouTube: https://youtube.com/@strengthaxis

    1 giờ 3 phút
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    EP. 08 - Advanced Lifters - The Art of Precision

    Advanced training isn’t about doing more — it’s about knowing what actually matters, and having the discipline to ignore everything else. Most people think advanced lifters train harder. In reality, they train smarter - because progress gets expensive This podcast is proudly sponsored by Harambe System - a variable resistance platform that’s become the foundation of my own training over the past two years. It bridges the gap between bands and weights, giving you smooth, consistent tension through a full range of motion - without the joint stress of traditional loading. If your goal is to build real strength while staying pain-free and training for the long game, it’s one of the best tools I’ve used. Why progress slows (and why that’s normal) The real game: tradeoffs The misunderstood power of maintenance How to choose goals without wasting months Auto-regulation and “train by feel” Training around injuries and constraints Why plateaus aren’t random The identity shift from chasing → sustaining At different stages of lifting: Beginner: everything works Intermediate: many things work Advanced: very few things work At this level: Adaptation slows Progress becomes subtle +5 lbs is real progress Maintaining strength while improving another quality = a win “At this level, progress isn’t obvious — it’s negotiated.” You cannot maximize everything at once. Every goal has a cost. Push strength → fatigue increases Push endurance (MTB, hiking) → strength may plateau Cut body fat → performance and energy may drop In real life, this looks like: Travel Van life Outdoor goals Limited time Advanced lifters don’t chase everything — they choose. This is where most people get it wrong. Maintenance ≠ laziness Maintenance = ownership If you can maintain something, you own it. If you can’t… you just visited it. 1–2 heavy exposures per week Rotating emphasis (not abandoning qualities) Keeping intensity, reducing volume Heavy push + pull once or twice per week OTM (on-the-minute) work to “touch” conditioning or power Kettlebell AXE or explosive work to maintain sharpness This is where Minimum Effective Dose (MED) becomes critical. Do only what is needed — and do it well. At the advanced level: The wrong goal = wasted months (or injury). You need: 1 primary driver 1–2 secondary supports Primary: Strength (pressing, deadlifting) Secondary: Conditioning (MTB, hiking) Winter → build (strength, mass) Spring → solidify Summer → perform (outdoors, leaner) Fall → rebuild Clarity beats intensity. Programs are frameworks — not rules. Adjust based on: Energy (6/10 vs 9/10 days) Joint feedback Bar speed Lifestyle stress Swap exercises if something feels off Keep load high, reduce volume Maintain structure, adjust execution Advanced lifters don’t guess — they adjust. You’re rarely 100%. Something always talks: Low back Shoulders Knees Elbows The key: Train around - not into - pain. One bad decision can cost weeks. This is where maturity shows up: Modify the movement Change the pattern Keep training, but intelligently Plateaus aren’t random. They usually come from: Poor goal clarity Too much fatigue Not enough recovery Lack of variation (or wrong variation) Or…You’re simply near a ceiling for that phase. Sometimes the goal isn’t to break through — it’s to hold steady while life demands more. Chase numbers Add more Push harder Consistency Adaptability Longevity The goal isn’t just to get strong — it’s to stay strong while living a full life. At a certain point, training stops being the main event. It becomes the foundation for: Hiking Mountain biking Travel Relationships Longevity You’re not training instead of life anymore. You’re training for it. Advanced training isn’t about doing more — it’s about knowing what actually matters, and having the discipline to ignore everything else. If you want help applying this: StrengthAxis Program Design (Substack) Elite Coaching + Performance Panel Harambe System training ecosystem

    56 phút
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    EP. 07 - The Future of Variable Resistance: Minimalism, Tension, & Longevity with Khalid Bou-Rabee

    Most people start training with one goal: Look better - More muscle. Less fat. Bigger numbers. But if you stay in the game long enough, something shifts. You stop chasing exhaustion… and start chasing sustainability. In this episode, I sat down with Khalid Bou Rabee - founder of the Harambe System—to break down what actually works in strength training when the goal isn’t just performance… …but longevity. Subscribe now This podcast is proudly sponsored by Harambe System - a variable resistance platform that’s become the foundation of my own training over the past two years. It bridges the gap between bands and weights, giving you smooth, consistent tension through a full range of motion - without the joint stress of traditional loading. If your goal is to build real strength while staying pain-free and training for the long game, it’s one of the best tools I’ve used. Childhood experience with weight / identity Mother’s cancer → catalyst for fitness Entry point through yoga, not lifting Academic background (math professor) Lack of practical fitness knowledge early on Khalid does not have a typical “fitness guy” origin story. Instead, he was: driven by his mother’s cancer scare determined to restore hers/his health driven by necessity Most people don’t enter training through optimization. They enter through a problem. CrossFit phase Lack of guidance → injuries Chasing intensity without understanding The “405lb deadlift claim” story Effort ≠ progress Intensity without structure leads to setbacks “You don’t get strong by doing more. You get strong by doing the right things - consistently.” Khalid had no clear progression in early training Random workouts vs structured progression Shock loading from free weights Difficulty managing force + technique Controlled progression > chaotic effort Discovery and experimentation with bands Differences vs traditional lifting: No shock loading Tension through range Joint-friendly Early equipment limitations → innovation Variable resistance isn’t “easier” It is: more controlled more repeatable more sustainable “The goal isn’t to survive training. The goal is to be able to train again tomorrow.” Consistent tension → hypertrophy Reference to 2025 study (tension across ROM) Real-world results (muscle gain without joint pain) Training frequency increases when recovery improves Right load Right volume Right execution Khalid’s bodybuilding phase Constant fatigue Overtraining signals Life conflict (business, kids, recovery) High volume works… …but at a cost. And most people: don’t have the recovery don’t have the lifestyle don’t need it “If your training takes more from your life than it gives… it’s not the right program.” Reduced volume Weekly structure restored Focus on key movements Better recovery + consistency Minimum Effective Dose = enough stimulus without unnecessary fatigue Training doesn’t need to be complicated - it needs to be focused on mind-muscle connection in the: main lifts optional accessories auto-regulation readiness-based loading Bands adjust to output Daily readiness matters No forced progression AI tracking (Harambe.Fit) supporting decision-making “Your body doesn’t care what’s written on paper. It responds to what you’re capable of today.” Leaving bodybuilding Not aligned with health Sustainability > aesthetics extremes Being present (family, life) “You can look strong without destroying your body to get there.” Integration of: hardware (tools) software (tracking, AI) community (Harambe Fit) Shift toward: efficiency sustainability personalization If you’re chasing strength, aesthetics, and longevity… You don’t need a more complicated plan. You need a more intentional one. 🎧 Listen to the full episode of The Axis Method with Khalid Bou Rabee to go deeper into the evolution of training, variable resistance, and building a body that lasts. John Parker StrengthAxis

    1 giờ 14 phút
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    EP. 06 - The Intermediate Trap: Why You’re Stuck (And How to Break Through)

    Most lifters don’t fail because they’re doing too little. They fail because they’re doing too much of the wrong things once they leave the beginner phase. And that’s where the intermediate trap lives. This episode is sponsored by Harambe System — the platform that’s fundamentally changed how I train. It bridges the gap between bands and weights, giving you: Smooth resistance Joint-friendly loading Real strength progression I’ve personally used it for the past two years and it’s allowed me to: Build muscle Maintain strength Train explosively Stay pain-free Harambe SystemHarambeSystem.com/JOHNPARKERBALLISTIC What Defines an Intermediate Lifter? You’re no longer a beginner if: You hit plateaus. The “just add 5 lbs every week” phase is over. Newbie gains are gone. Now: Progress slows Adaptation requires strategy Execution matters more than effort You can lift. But: You don’t always follow your program Life “gets in the way” Consistency breaks down Sleep. Stress. Lifestyle. You can’t out-train bad recovery anymore. This is where most people stall. You keep changing direction. New program → new excitement → no long-term progress. You think: “More must be better.” It’s not. You’re chasing: Sweat Soreness Exhaustion Instead of: Adaptation Performance Skill You’re trying to feel the workout… Instead of building something. HRV drops. Sleep sucks. Bar speed slows. You still push. This is the turning point. Stop doing more. Start doing better. Leave the gym feeling: Better Sharper More capable Not destroyed. You don’t need novelty. You need: Repetition Skill refinement Measurable progress (ADD LINK: StrengthAxis Program Design / Performance Tracks) This is one of the most important concepts I teach. Train around ~70% effort Move weights fast and clean Avoid grinding reps These are real-world numbers I use: 20–30 total reps Best structure: 2-3-5 ladders 15–25 reps Manage eccentric load carefully 10–15 reps CNS-heavy → respect it Do less perfectly. Not more imperfectly. Strength is a skill. Better execution = more progress. Weeks → Months → Years Not random bursts of motivation. You don’t just train muscles. You train: CNS readiness Recovery capacity Adaptation ability Sleep, stress, lifestyle. These are not “extras.” They are inputs. Here’s how I program most clients: A1 / A2 superset 4 sets Done fresh 3 sets Moderate load Controlled tempo Arms, delts, core 2–3 sets Push Pull Hinge Squat Simple. Effective. Repeatable. Forget random burnout sessions. Instead: Walking Rucking Kettlebell ballistics On-the-minute work (ADD LINK: Kettlebell AXE / conditioning article) Not every day is a PR day. You’re not “working out.” You’re training. That means: Adjusting loads Managing energy Respecting recovery (ADD LINK: Auto-Regulation article) Discipline isn’t forcing it. It’s knowing when to pivot. If you’re stuck as an intermediate lifter: The answer isn’t more. It’s better. Better reps Better structure Better decisions If you want help applying this: Performance Tracks → Structured training Program Design → Monthly systems Harambe System → Joint-friendly strength platform Most people never leave the intermediate phase. Not because they can’t. But because they refuse to change how they train. If this helped, drop a comment or share it with someone stuck in the middle. John Parker StrengthAxis

    46 phút
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    EP. 05 - How Beginners Should Actually Start Strength Training (Step-by-Step Framework)

    Most Beginners Don’t Need More Effort - They Need Better Direction If you’re new to training - or you’ve been spinning your wheels for years - the problem probably isn’t your effort. It’s your approach. After 17+ years as a strength coach, I’ve seen the same pattern over and over again: People do too much, too soon They skip the fundamentals They train through pain They jump from program to program And they never build real consistency So today, I’m going to walk you through how I actually take someone from pain and dysfunction → strength → real performance. This is the framework. Subscribe now This podcast is proudly sponsored by Harambe System - a variable resistance platform that’s become the foundation of my own training over the past two years. It bridges the gap between bands and weights, giving you smooth, consistent tension through a full range of motion - without the joint stress of traditional loading. If your goal is to build real strength while staying pain-free and training for the long game, it’s one of the best tools I’ve used. Most people don’t fail because they’re lazy. They fail because they chase intensity before they build function. They want: Hard workouts Sweat Exhaustion “Feeling like they did something” But they skip the foundation that actually produces results. “If you don’t give a program at least 4–6 weeks, you’ll never know if it works.” Consistency beats everything. Before we talk about strength… We fix the machine. This is where most people need to spend their first 4–6 weeks. Joint mobility (shoulders, hips, ankles) Muscle length & balance Stability and control Pain reduction Hanging from a bar PVC shoulder work Indian clubs Knees-over-toes progressions Basic core work (dead bugs, bracing) You’re not chasing fatigue here. You’re restoring function. “Pain-free movement is non-negotiable.” If something hurts sharply → stop. If it’s discomfort → assess and adjust. Now we build. But we don’t jump straight into heavy lifting. We earn it. Gradual load progression Clean technique Submaximal training Consistency over intensity 3–5 core exercises Full-body structure Add reps → then load → then complexity Example: Week 1: 8 reps Week 2: 9 reps Week 3: 10 reps Week 4: 11 reps Pick a program. Run it for 4–8 weeks. Track progress. Then adjust. Once your foundation is solid, now we layer in conditioning. But not randomly. Daily walking (7–10k steps) Basic activity consistency Then progress to: Kettlebell ballistics (anti-glycolytic) Light circuits Sports / hobbies I’m not a fan of crushing yourself with HIIT. I’d rather see: Better recovery Better movement Better consistency “Your hobbies are your best conditioning.” Hike. Bike. Surf. Play. That’s real fitness. This is where most people overcomplicate things. You don’t need: 20 exercises Fancy equipment Constant variation You need: Structure Repetition Intent “The magic is in the repetition.” Track these: Pain ↓ Range of motion ↑ Control ↑ Strength ↑ Not everything needs to be complicated metrics. Here’s the part most people miss. Training isn’t just about your body. It’s about your life. “Training builds the discipline that carries into everything else.” When you: Show up consistently Track your progress Execute with intent That spills into: Nutrition Sleep Work Relationships Training becomes the glue. Minimum: 2 days/week (full body) Ideal: 3–4 days/week Add: walking + hobbies That’s it. You don’t need more. You need better. If you’re starting (or restarting), do this: Fix pain first Build consistency Progress slowly Stay in one program Get 1% better each session “Most beginners don’t need more effort. They need better direction.” Diana and I just released a Dumbbell Performance Track for those training at home. One pair of dumbbells Simple progression Built for real-world consistency 👉 You can find it inside StrengthAxis (BASE & Elite members) If you want the full breakdown, including coaching examples and deeper explanations: John Parker StrengthAxis

    50 phút
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    EP. 04 - Functional Medicine Meets Performance With Westley Spiro, MD

    Functional Medicine Meets Performance With Westley Spiro, MD “It is not about doing more.It is about doing what actually moves the needle.” In this episode of The Axis Method, I sat down with Westley Spiro MD—functional medicine physician and founder of Catalyst Precision. What made this conversation different is that Dr. Spiro doesn’t just talk about health—he lives it. His training, nutrition, supplementation, and clinical practice all align around one principle: Optimization through intelligent consistency. This conversation bridges two worlds: Performance training Functional medicine And shows how they should never be separated. Dr. Spiro’s current structure is simple—and that’s the point. Push / Pull split (4 days/week) Sprint-based conditioning (2–3 days/week) Focus on explosive movement over maximal loading Key takeaways: Sprinting may be one of the most underutilized tools for mitochondrial health and hormone response You don’t need high volume—you need high intent Joint longevity > ego lifting We aligned heavily here: The Minimum Effective Dose is not about doing less—it’s about doing what matters most. Some of his current staples: Romanian Deadlifts Bulgarian Split Squats Dumbbell Pressing Weighted Pull-Ups & Dips Rear Delt / Scapular Work Why it matters: Less axial load → more longevity Unilateral work → better structural balance Dumbbells → joint-friendly strength This mirrors what I’ve seen for years: Most lifters don’t need more load—they need better positioning and control. Key concept: Multivitamins = convenience, not optimization Blood work should guide supplementation This aligns directly with how I structure DRESS protocols for clients. This was one of the strongest sections of the episode. Key principles: Deep sleep = growth hormone + testosterone release Circadian rhythm drives everything Consistency > total hours His non-negotiables: Same sleep/wake time No screens before bed Morning sunlight immediately upon waking I’ll echo this: If your sleep is off, everything else is just noise. We broke down the current landscape: BPC-157 / TB-500 → recovery (limited human data) Growth hormone peptides → performance + body composition GLP-1s → metabolic control, not just fat loss Big takeaway: The peptide conversation isn’t about shortcuts—it’s about regulation catching up to reality. The future likely looks like: Physician-guided use Better quality control More personalized dosing This was one of the most valuable parts for listeners. Dr. Spiro emphasized: Testosterone is a health marker, not just a performance tool Optimization ≠ abuse Many men are suboptimal, not deficient Key option discussed: Stimulates natural testosterone production Preserves fertility Avoids shutdown seen with TRT What stood out most: When testosterone improves, energy, mood, and consistency improve first—physique follows. We built out a real-world avatar: Male, mid-40s High stress Trains inconsistently Slight fat gain Energy fluctuations First steps in care: Comprehensive blood work Lifestyle audit (sleep, diet, stress) Training frequency correction Hormone evaluation Notably: Most people don’t need more complexity—they need better execution of fundamentals. From Dr. Spiro’s perspective: Scale weight Complex protocols Over-tracking everything Strength training Meal timing Sleep consistency Blood glucose control (A1C) Most overrated supplement: Calcium Most underrated habit: Meal timing One marker to track: A1C Longevity driver: Strength training Recovery tool: Sauna > cold plunge Morning essential: Sunlight immediately Dr. Spiro operates the same way I coach. Start simple Measure what matters Build consistency Layer in precision over time This is the intersection of: Performance × Longevity × Reality Catalyst Precision Instagram: @catalystprecisionhealth Substack: Beyond Normal Science YouTube: West Spiro MD

    1 giờ 12 phút
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    EP. 03 - The Evolution of Minimalist Strength Training

    Minimalist strength training has shaped my entire career. Long before I became a private strength coach, I trained the way many young lifters do - chasing volume, fatigue, and believing that more work automatically meant more results. Over time, through coaching thousands of athletes and managing my own performance goals, I came to understand a different truth. Strength is not built through exhaustion. It is built through intelligent practice. Much of this realization came from exposure to the work of Pavel Tsatsouline and the systems that later became the foundation of the StrongFirst methodology. These programs influenced not only my own development as an athlete, but the structure of training I have used with clients for over 17 years. In this podcast and show notes, I want to explore what these minimalist systems get right - and how my philosophy has evolved from them. Minimalist training is often misunderstood. It is not about doing less. It is about doing what matters most. Programs such as Power to the People! demonstrated that significant strength gains could be made using extremely low training volume. A deadlift variation and a press variation, performed frequently with sub-maximal loads, could drive powerful neural adaptations. The key principle was simple: Practice strength often, but avoid fatigue. Athletes accumulate high-quality repetitions, maintain perfect form, and gradually build structural integrity. Over time, this creates a nervous system that is prepared for heavier efforts without the need for constant maximal training. As a younger lifter, I struggled to believe that such minimal work could be effective. Now, with decades of coaching experience behind me, I see how powerful this approach truly is — especially for busy adults balancing training with real life. One of the most influential programming tools introduced in early kettlebell literature was the ladder system. Instead of performing large sets that degrade technique, ladders distribute volume across smaller efforts. A structure such as 2-3-5 allows athletes to build momentum through manageable sets before confronting a more demanding final effort. Athletes often end up performing more total volume while maintaining better technique. For this reason, ladder structures remain a cornerstone of my programming today. More recent minimalist frameworks introduced explosive ballistic training with structured rest intervals. These systems aim to improve power endurance while minimizing metabolic fatigue. Heavy kettlebell swings, snatches, and short power chains allow athletes to train explosively while maintaining aerobic recovery between efforts. Over time, this style of training can improve mitochondrial efficiency, heart-rate recovery, and overall work capacity. Athletes train movements frequently, refine technique, and accumulate strength gradually. This produces durable performance — the kind that lasts decades rather than months. When applied intelligently, minimalist training can build elite fitness using surprisingly small amounts of work. The movements themselves may be simple.The results are anything but. If you are interested in applying these principles, I publish structured training programs each month through StrengthAxis. Base members receive full access to all programming tracks. Elite members receive additional coaching support, performance analysis, and individualized guidance. Strength is a lifelong practice. Train with intention. John ParkerStrengthAxis

    45 phút
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    EP. 02 - Why Variable Resistance Became My Primary System

    Strength isn’t just about lifting heavier weights. It’s about building a body that performs, adapts, and lasts for decades. In this episode of The Axis Method, I break down why variable resistance training - and specifically Harambe System - went from being a simple experiment to becoming the foundation of my own training. I’ve spent most of my life around traditional strength training. Barbells, kettlebells, sprint work, heavy lifting, explosive lifting - that world shaped me as an athlete and as a coach. But over time, I started asking a different question: What style of training allows me to stay strong, powerful, and muscular without constantly beating up my joints? That question led me deeper into variable resistance training. This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Harambe System. Harambe System is a compact variable resistance training platform built around two core components: The CyberBar The CyberPlate The system uses precision rollers and a patented pulley mechanism to allow resistance bands to move smoothly and consistently throughout a lift. Unlike traditional band setups that create friction and uneven loading, Harambe System’s design helps maintain tension through the full range of motion. And that matters. Recent research confirms that muscle growth depends primarily on tension across the full range of motion, regardless of where peak resistance occurs. Over the past two years, Harambe System has become the foundation of my own strength training, allowing me to build strength, maintain power, and reduce joint irritation compared to heavy barbell training. If you’d like to learn more: Code: JohnParkerBallistic for 10% off If you train long enough, your elbows and wrists will eventually start talking to you. In this episode, I talk about: how I first became interested in variable resistance through Westside Barbell and Louie Simmons why bands and accommodating resistance are not new ideas how I connected with Khalid and eventually decided to invest in Harambe System what my first impressions were of the CyberPlate, CyberBar, handles, and accessories why the resistance curve feels so different from traditional free weights how Harambe helped me maintain strength and muscle while reducing joint irritation why explosive lifting fits my body better than grinding reps how I use slower tempo work for arm training, tendon health, and joint resilience how I program Harambe sessions for myself, beginners, aging lifters, and athletes why portability, convenience, and home gym usability matter so much where I believe variable resistance training is headed in the future One of the biggest takeaways from this entire journey is that variable resistance did not replace the fundamentals for me - it refined them. I still care about tension. I still care about form. I still care about power, muscle, and performance. At 40, I’m not interested in grinding myself into the floor just to prove I can still suffer through ugly reps. I want to train hard, move explosively, protect my joints, and stay capable for the long haul - both in the gym and outside of it. That’s a big reason why Harambe System became my primary training system. This episode is for: lifters curious about variable resistance training coaches looking for another useful tool experienced trainees trying to maintain muscle and strength with less wear and tear athletes and outdoor-minded people who want performance without unnecessary punishment anyone interested in building a body that lasts If that sounds like you, I think you’ll enjoy this one. Listen to Episode 2 below. If you’re interested in variable resistance training, you can also check out my free VRT ebook on Substack, where I break down foundational concepts and applications in more detail. In my 16 years as a professional strength coach, I’ve been obsessed with one question: My practice is my art.And variable resistance has become one of my main brushes. John ParkerStrengthAxis

    57 phút
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    EP. 01 - My StrongFirst Journey

    Strength isn’t just about lifting heavier weights. It’s about building a body that performs, adapts, and lasts for decades. That idea has shaped my entire coaching career. After more than 17 years working as a private strength coach in San Diego, I’ve come to believe that the most powerful training systems share three qualities: Simplicity Consistency Respect for the body That philosophy is the foundation of StrengthAxis, and it’s the reason I’m launching The Axis Method. This podcast will explore the science, philosophy, and practice of strength training -from barbells and kettlebells to metabolic health, longevity, and intelligent program design. For the first episode, I wanted to start with the system that shaped a huge portion of my development as a coach: My StrongFirst Journey In this episode I share: How I first discovered kettlebells My experience earning the SFG Level 1 certification in 2014 Returning to pursue additional certifications in 2019 Becoming a StrongFirst Elite The journey toward achieving the Beast Tamer What StrongFirst taught me about strength, discipline, and program design And a few honest reflections about what I liked - and what I didn’t (or don’t). This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Harambe System. Harambe System is a compact variable resistance training platform built around two core components: The CyberBar The CyberPlate The system uses precision rollers and a patented pulley mechanism to allow resistance bands to move smoothly and consistently throughout a lift. Unlike traditional band setups that create friction and uneven loading, Harambe System’s design helps maintain tension through the full range of motion. And that matters. Recent research confirms that muscle growth depends primarily on tension across the full range of motion, regardless of where peak resistance occurs. That’s exactly what this system is built to deliver. Over the past two years, Harambe System has become the foundation of my own strength training, allowing me to build strength, maintain power, and reduce joint irritation compared to heavy barbell training. If you’d like to learn more: When I look back at my career, StrongFirst wasn’t about earning certifications. It was a turning point. Before that time, my coaching was still shaped by the traditional fitness culture: More volume, more exhaustion, more intensity. What StrongFirst introduced me to was something very different: Precision. Instead of chasing fatigue, the focus shifted to: Technical mastery Strategic programming High-quality repetitions Long-term progression Over time, those principles became the backbone of my own coaching philosophy. One of the most memorable milestones in my StrongFirst journey was achieving the Beast Tamer. The challenge requires three feats of strength using a 48kg kettlebell: • A strict military press • A strict weighted pull-up • A strict pistol squat For many coaches in the StrongFirst community, the Beast Tamer represents the pinnacle of kettlebell strength. After months of focused training and careful programming, I was able to complete the challenge while assisting a certification in San Diego. It remains one of the most satisfying accomplishments of my training career. Even after achieving StrongFirst Elite, my education hasn’t stopped. Recently I attended an Olympic lifting seminar with Jeremy Layport, and later this year I’ll be attending additional StrongFirst workshops - Enter the Dumbbell, Resilient with Pavel Macek. Future episodes of The Axis Method will explore topics like: Minimum Effective Dose training Variable resistance and Harambe System Blood chemistry and metabolic health The philosophy of strength With professional guests from these fields and more… If there’s a topic you’d like me to cover, feel free to leave a comment. — John Parker StrengthAxis

    27 phút

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The Axis Method Podcast explores intelligent strength training, functional health, and performance-based lifestyle design. Hosted by strength coach John Parker, the show focuses on building real-world strength through the Minimum Effective Dose (MED) philosophy. Episodes cover kettlebells, band training, rucking, recovery, supplementation, mindset, and integrating fitness into everyday life. Proudly supported by its first sponsor, Harambe System. Train with intention. Build strength for life.

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