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Fitness

What Deadlifting 225 Kilos Taught Me

A journey to big PBs isn't about the perfect program or expensive equipment - it's about consistency and effort.

Robert Camacho

Written by Robert Camacho Last updated on Jul 5, 2023

I’ve never been a natural athlete. Most of my genetic gifts were intellectual rather than physical. Maybe that’s why I’ve always been fascinated by the way people move.

I think we’re often drawn to the things we don’t have. Regardless of my genetic limitations, I passed a personal milestone a few weeks ago by deadlifting 225 kilos. While this is by no means an earth-shattering load, as someone with a long list of injuries and a short list of athletic accomplishments, I found it to be pretty awesome.

In this article, I’m going to talk about the things I learned in my pursuit of that 225-kilo pull.

Powerlifters Are a Bunch of Amazing Weirdos

Powerlifting occupies an odd space in popular culture. On the one hand, pulling sumo, wearing lifting shoes, and focusing on the big three seems to be en vogue. On the other hand, if you tell people you’re a powerlifter, it still elicits something of an odd response. “Oh really? Wow. That’s crazy.”

If you look at a lot of powerlifters, the response makes some sense. They’re an intimidating group of people, many of them sporting beards and physiques you’re more likely to find on a medieval battlefield than in a boardroom. They also happen to be one of the friendliest, most welcoming, and unflinchingly supportive group of people I’ve ever come across.

If you go to a powerlifting meet, you’ll notice a trend. Amid all the shouts and snapped ammonia caps, it becomes clear these people only care about one thing: effort. They don’t care if you’re pulling three times your bodyweight or less than half. All they want is to watch you leave it all on the platform. The biggest cheers are usually for the people who try the hardest, regardless of if they fail or not.

“You have to find the program that works for you, and that’s going to require some honest objectivity and self-analysis.”

Most of the congratulations I got at my meet weren’t on lifts I made. They were on the effort in the lifts I couldn’t finish. People you’ve never met will shout words of encouragement and offer you advice when you fail. While some might see this as condescending, I never felt anyone was doing anything other than genuinely trying to help me.

Powerlifters can seem gruff and intimidating, but if you prove to them you want it and you’ll work for it, they’ll welcome you with open arms. If you’re scared about signing up for your first meet, don’t be. You could go alone and, as long as you’re supportive and respectful, you’ll leave with plenty of new friends.

Your Program Isn’t as Important as Your Consistency

I tried a lot of different programs on the way to 225 kilos. The most important thing I learned was not which program worked the best or what percentages gave me the most progress. What I learned is that in the long run, consistency far outweighs how perfect your program is.

People spend a lot of time worrying about reps and sets and how much work they need to do at ninety percent of their max versus seventy and so on. Do those things matter? Absolutely. Just not as much as most people think. There’s a saying that the degree to which people will argue about something is inversely related to the importance of that thing. The fact that there are so many different programs is pretty sound evidence that your particular program isn’t that important. The fact that you’re doing something and doing so consistently will far outweigh whether you did CrossFit or 5/3/1 over time.

Programs Aren’t Good or Bad – They Work for You or Don’t

Obviously there are some terrible programs out there, but that’s not what I’m talking about. For six months I pursued strength focused programs that had a moderate to low amount of volume and very high intensity. Why? Well, that’s what most of the people who had successfully accomplished my goal had done. Seemed simple enough. But the problem was I needed a program for me, not just a program that had worked for someone else.

“When I stood up with the weight and then put it down, nothing changed in that instant where my goal became an accomplishment.”

I spent a bit too much time doing singles, doubles, and triples with a lot of weight and not nearly enough volume at lighter loads. It took me a while to figure out that I respond better to high volume than I do high intensity. I still go up into the higher percentages of my 1RM as part of a cycle, but I always make more progress during the portions focused on accumulating volume.

I have a friend who worked up to a 275-kilo pull by never doing more than three reps a set. It worked for him, and it might work for you, but that approach didn’t do much for me other than make my back hurt. You have to find the program that works for you, and that’s going to require some honest objectivity and self-analysis.

Assistive Equipment Isn’t Good or Bad Either

There’s a lot of stuff you can buy to help your lifting. Wraps, sleeves, shoes, belts, and the list goes on. I own a good weightlifting belt and a pair of Romaleos, and I’m glad I do, even though I don’t use them that much.

Belts are a weird thing. Many people train predominantly with a belt and make significant progress. More power to them. I wasn’t one of those people. Much like training at high intensity, training with a belt just doesn’t seem to have the same effect on me. I still use it above a certain weight for squats and pulls, but I progressed the most when I didn’t use a belt for the majority of my training cycle.

I’m not advocating everyone lose their belts. I’m saying you need to pay close attention to your training and progress, and be honest with yourself about what’s helping and what isn’t. A belt can solve some people’s problems. It can also cover up many of them.

Life Is More Important

The most important thing I learned over the last year and a half is that I don’t really care about deadlifting 225 kilos. When I stood up with the weight and then put it down, nothing changed in that instant where my goal became an accomplishment.

“While this is by no means an earth-shattering load, as someone with a long list of injuries and a short list of athletic accomplishments, I found it to be pretty awesome.”

It was never really about the number, or even the lift. It was about the process. Picking a goal gave me motivation to train and stay consistent. It also gave me an objective measure of how effective my methods were. Now that I’ve done it, I don’t care to move on and pull 275 kilos because, frankly, I’m kind of bored. The point is not to never change your goals. I think the point is just that you always have one.

As for me, I’m not exactly sure what’s next. I have always wanted to learn how to do a backflip, though.

Check out these related articles:

  • The Worst Strength Training Advice On the Internet
  • 15 Practical Strategies to Increase Your Deadlift Max
  • How to Put 40kg On Your Deadlift In 15 Weeks
  • What’s New On Breaking Muscle UK Today

Photo 1 courtesy of Becca Borawski Jenkins.

Photos 2 and 3 courtesy of Shannon Khoury.

Robert Camacho

About Robert Camacho

Robert was something of an odd child. Not particularly athletically gifted, he instead spent most of his time reading comics and watching martial arts movies. Slowly but surely, the steady diet of incredible (if fictitious) physical specimens instilled in him a desire to begin training of some sort. Fueled by hours of awesome but highly questionable action movie workout montages mixed with some subconscious desire to become Batman, Robert found himself desperate for any information that would help him along his road to becoming bigger, stronger and faster.

This life-long interest led Robert to pursuing a degree in exercise science and a career in the fitness industry. It also, rather unfortunately, left him plagued with a variety of debilitating injuries. While doing pistols on an upside-down Bosu and clapping pull ups was impressive, he believes it was precisely that type of flashy, dangerous training coupled with participation in combat sports that left him with torn labrums in his right shoulder and left hip and a torn ligament in his foot. He also managed to acquire tendonitis in just about every joint with tendons (read: all of them).

Disillusioned by his stint as a trainer in a corporate gym and frustrated by the injuries that kept him from training, Robert began working at a sports physical therapy clinic, helping design and implement late-stage return to sport training protocols for athletes who had completed their post-surgical rehab. Rabidly absorbing all information available to him through this new experience and constantly harassing all of his fellow clinicians with questions, Robert gained a unique insight and understanding into both the human body and his own personal struggles with injury. Constantly seeking to improve his understanding of diagnosing and treating movement disorders, Robert has spent the last five years assisting athletes of all levels, from children to the professionals, in returning to their sport pain free and stronger than ever.

When he’s not reading, writing, or ranting on his blog, Robert splits his time between his role at SportsCare Physical Therapy in Paramus, New Jersey, trying to deadlift 500lbs, and as a student chasing his own Doctor of Physical Therapy.

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