Calisthenics Beginner Program
Calisthenics Beginner Program
CALISTHENICS
WRITTEN BY
MALCOLM A
BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Disclaimer
This is for informational purposes only.
Consult a physician before performing
this or any exercise program. I am not a
personal trainer, If you choose to work
with the forthcoming advice, you are
agreeing to accept full responsibility for
your actions.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Table Of Contents
ROM ....................................................................13
Progressive overload ........................................14
Rest/Recovery & Deloading...............................15
Setting a goal .....................................................16
Reps and sets .....................................................17
Beginner/Intermidate exercises ......................18
Beginner Skills ....................................................19
Crafting a skill focused routine.........................20
Contact me ......................................................... 21
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Starting Out
Firstly I want to congratulate you on taking the first step to changing
your life for the better, calisthenics isn't just a work out, its a lifestyle
that will stay with you for the rest of your life. The skills you learn
won't only impress others but better yourself, the discipline you will
develop from training consistently will help you in every aspect of
your life, and I'm so proud that you decided to be more than average
and take control of your life. This is just the beginning for you :)
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Now on the other side, losing weight is also very simple, its not
easy but its as straight forward as being in a calorie deficit and
training consistently. As long as your are consuming less
calories than your body needs you will lose weight. Also
increasing your water intake and reducing your sugar
consumption will help tremendously. This combined with
consistent training and a proper diet will accelerate the
process.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Training At Home
The wonderful thing about calisthenics is that it does not require a gym
membership, all you need is yourself and minimal equipment, here’s a
list of recommended equipment that will be beneficial in your journey.
Wrist wraps - These help take pressure off your wrists and protect
them from Injury. (highly recommended)
Chalk - This will help with your grip, and stop you from slipping while
on the pull-up bar, cheap but effective. (highly recommended)
Parallettes - These are the parallel bars you have most likely seen me
use in most of my videos, they're portable, lightweight, and help with
shoulder stability, balance, control, and provide elevation off the floor,
making skills like the L sit much easier. (highly recommended)
*Note*
Calisthenics Equipment now available at [Link]
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Beginner Routine
If you are a complete beginner refer to the first workout schedule and
perform the conditioning circuit. If you are a bit further along then
choose from the pushing and pulling table on page 16 to build your
training schedule. For the weekends, you can choose to continue the
every other day schedule or rest. I personally use the weekends as a
chance to give my body some extra time to recover.
Calisthenics skills can be split up into pushing and pulling skills. For
example the hanging L sit and pulling portion of the muscle up can be
trained on pull days. The pushing portion of the muscle up can be
trained on push days. I personally follow schedule 1 where I do both
pushing and pulling on the same day.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Complete Beginner
Conditioning workout Circuit *Note* If unable to
10 pullups complete a full rep of a
20 pushups pullup or pushup refer
1 minute plank to the next page
10 bodyweight squats
Rest needed varies, but for complete beginners 2-5 minutes
should be more than enough
3-5 sets
Going through all exercises one after the other with minimal rest in-
between is most beneficial. It's important to keep your heart rate up,
so try not to take too long between exercises. Going through all
exercises counts as 1 set.
Warmup
It's important to warmup before training, warming up dilates your blood
vessels, making sure your muscles are supplied with oxygen. It also
"warms you up" making your muscles more flexible and efficient. You're
most prone to injury if you just jump into an exercise without proper
prep, don't neglect the warmup.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
The Pull-up
The pull-up is a fundamental and crucial exercise in
calisthenics due to its ability to target multiple muscle groups
simultaneously, making it an excellent compound movement.
The Pushup
The push-up is another fundamental and
indispensable exercise in calisthenics, renowned for
its effectiveness in building upper body strength and
endurance. By primarily targeting the chest,
shoulders, triceps, and core, push-ups are a versatile
compound movement that engages multiple muscle
groups simultaneously.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Pushups
Pushup support hold (30 secs / 3-5 sets)
Negative pushups (5-10 reps / 3-5 sets)
Incline Pushups (5-10 reps / 3-5 sets)
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
The Core
Recommended excercises
(Ordered by difficulty)
Planks
Hollow body hold
Leg raises (Hanging from bar or laying on floor)
L sit
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Negatives
Take the pull-up for example, if you are not strong enough
to do a full pull-up what you would do instead is start from
the top position and lower yourself back down slowly to the
starting position. Repeat this until you've gained enough
strength to be able to do a full pull-up.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Compound Exercises
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Progressive Overload
An important term to be familiar with is Progressive
overload. This is the increase in stress placed on the
body over time. If you continue to perform the same
exercises without increasing the difficulty or adding
different variations you will plateau and stop seeing
progress. This is why its important to keep track of
your progress so you can know when it might be time
to move on to harder variations.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Rest/Recovery
Resting is more important than training, let me elaborate.
You don't get stronger when you leave the gym. Strength
only develops when you give your body the chance to
recover. It's important to take your rest days seriously,
neglecting rest can negatively impact your performance.
Make sure you're getting proper sleep and take a break
when needed, take care of your body.
Deloading
Deloading is an important term to know, think of it as a vacation for
your body. All the wear and tear your body goes through while you
are training cannot be fully recovered from a single day of rest. Over
time, this wear will build up, and you will not feel fully recovered.
Exercises that used to be easy will now be difficult for you. For every
3-4 weeks of training you should take a full week off.
Some prefer to do light training during this week (Ex. 2 sets of each
exercise with reduced intensity). I personally prefer to rest for the
week but the decision is yours, just make sure that if you do train, its
at a much lighter intensity than normal.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Setting A Goal
Once you've completed your beginner conditioning its time
to decide what it is you want to do. Do you want to focus on
skill training? Or are you just looking to build body mass?
You will gain mass and strength regardless of which way you
decide to go.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Rather than give a static number of reps or sets for each exercise, I
want you to be able to determine how many you should do on your
own. I always give the Guideline of 3-5-10 reps and 3-5 sets because
that is the typical range for strength training. However that number
can change depending on how difficult an exercise is. For example
pushups, a relatively easy exercise can easily be 10-20 reps for 5
sets. Something like the handstand pushup which is significantly
harder would warrant something like 2-3 reps for 5 sets. The reps
and sets will change Depending on how difficult an exercise is.
Play around with this number and find the best range. Don't be
afraid to experiment, remember this is a lifestyle, take your time and
learn along the way.
When training to gain body mass, its important to train with enough
volume to overload your muscles. Progressively increasing the
number and difficulty of reps will yield the best results.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Pushing
*Beginner Regular Pushups (Targets chest, triceps)
*Intermediate Explosive Pushups(For fast twitch muscle fibers)
*Intermediate Diamond Pushups (More emphasis on triceps)
*Intermediate Wide Pushups (Targets chest, shoulders, up arms)
*Beginner Regular Dips(Targets chest, triceps, shoulders, upper
back, lower back)
*Intermediate Weighted Dips(Same as dips)
*Beginner Pike pushups(Targets shoulders and triceps)
*Intermediate Wall HSPU (Targets shoulders and triceps, Face to
wall more difficult than back to wall)
Pulling
*Beginner Regular Pull-ups (Targets most back)
*Beginner Australian/Horizontal Pull-ups (Targets back)
*Beginner Chin ups (Targets biceps and back)
*Intermediate Explosive pull-ups (To chest)
*Intermediate Weighted pullups(Same as pull-ups)
*Intermediate Muscle ups (Breakdown on skills page)
*Intermediate High Pull-ups
*Intermediate L-sit pullups (Back and Core)
Core
*Beginner Planks
*Beginner Knee raises
*Beginner Half Leg raises
*Beginner Hollow body holds
*Intermediate Half Leg raises (Hanging from bar or laying on
floor)
*Intermediate Full leg raise (toes to bar)
*Intermediate L sit progressions/ hold
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Beginner Skills
L sit
The L sit is a fundamental calisthenics skill, helping you develop the
necessary core strength to move on to more difficult exercises like the L
sit pullup and the dragon flag, follow the progressions below to develop
the strength to hold an L-sit
Progressions
*Easiest Hanging knee raise hold (30 sec / 3-5 sets)
Alternating 1 leg hold (20 sec/ 3-5 sets)
Hanging L sit hold (10 sec / 3-5 sets)
*Hardest Floor L sit hold (5-10 sec/ 3-5 sets)
*Note visual representation
of muscle in program videos
Muscle up folder
The muscle up can be broken down into 3 parts: Pulling, Pushing, and
the Technique.
For the pulling portion, you need to develop enough explosive pulling
strength to get high enough to reach the transition point. To develop
this you need to start training for high pullups, try to pull to your waist,
at first you wont get very high but over time you will be able to pull
higher.
For the pushing portion you need to develop enough strength to push
through once you've gone through the transition. This can be
developed via slow and controlled reps of straight bar dips , these will
help you develop the strength to push out once your on top of the bar.
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Routine breakdown
Current Level progression(12 sec hold 3-5 sets)
Dynamic progression before current level (5-10 second
Accessory Exercise 1
Accessory Exercise 2 (optional)
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BEGINNER CALISTHENICS
Contact Me
I'd appreciate any feedback on your experience with
this program, if things were unclear or if you would
like more information on a topic send me a message.
For 1 on 1 coaching:
[Link]
Tiktok: @Malky_malk
Instagram: @Malky_malk
Youtube: @Malky_malk
Email: zeromediaxy@[Link]
Discord: Linked in Instagram Bio
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