For those that don’t have a convenient place to hang a pullup bar, or as a general alternative/addon, I recommend dumbbells. I bought a nice set (2 x 20kg, 0.5, 1.25, 2, 5kg increments) for around $100 and cancelled my gym membership. They paid for themselves in 2 months time. Now I’m saving money and more fit then ever because I actually workout, instead of making excuses why not to go to the gym (it’s too cooold, it’s raaaining, I don’t have tiiiime, etc.)
Not sure if I can recommend this suggestion, because for me exactly the opposite worked out fine.
I never used fitness crap lying around my home regularly but once I started paying for a gym membership there was no way I would just stay at home and pay for nothing.
In other words I used the sunken cost fallacy for my benefit.
Once I was more advanced it wasn’t the money I spent on my membership that kept me going but knowing that I’ll actually get weaker if I started to only go 2 times a week instead of keeping up my 3 times a week routine. So every time I didn’t visit my full 3 days a week it felt like I essentially wasted a few of my last trips to the gym because I wouldn’t see any progress and at the very best just keep my performance at a plateau.
I trained quite hard for 1,5 years and missed maybe 4 training sessions, until a knee injury from squatting with too much weight coupled with moving to a new location put a stop to my training days.
So far not too much; I’ve been adapting some exercise routines from The 4-Hour Body which has a strongly minimalist approach. Shoulder Press (seated), Bench Press, Kneeling Rows, and Squats. Doing just the basics seems to be working!
For those that don’t have a convenient place to hang a pullup bar, or as a general alternative/addon, I recommend dumbbells. I bought a nice set (2 x 20kg, 0.5, 1.25, 2, 5kg increments) for around $100 and cancelled my gym membership. They paid for themselves in 2 months time. Now I’m saving money and more fit then ever because I actually workout, instead of making excuses why not to go to the gym (it’s too cooold, it’s raaaining, I don’t have tiiiime, etc.)
Not sure if I can recommend this suggestion, because for me exactly the opposite worked out fine.
I never used fitness crap lying around my home regularly but once I started paying for a gym membership there was no way I would just stay at home and pay for nothing.
In other words I used the sunken cost fallacy for my benefit.
Once I was more advanced it wasn’t the money I spent on my membership that kept me going but knowing that I’ll actually get weaker if I started to only go 2 times a week instead of keeping up my 3 times a week routine. So every time I didn’t visit my full 3 days a week it felt like I essentially wasted a few of my last trips to the gym because I wouldn’t see any progress and at the very best just keep my performance at a plateau.
I trained quite hard for 1,5 years and missed maybe 4 training sessions, until a knee injury from squatting with too much weight coupled with moving to a new location put a stop to my training days.
What do you do with the dumbbells? I’m curious because I only know a few things to do with them, and they’re all mostly upper-body.
So far not too much; I’ve been adapting some exercise routines from The 4-Hour Body which has a strongly minimalist approach. Shoulder Press (seated), Bench Press, Kneeling Rows, and Squats. Doing just the basics seems to be working!
Hold them and do squats, hold them and jump, do either of those on one foot rather than two. Thosr are passable lower body barbell exercises.