Poll: Pull ups. Have you ever done one?

runnernda

New member
Feb 8, 2010
613
0
0
GrimTuesday said:
Nope, I've never been able to do a pull up my entire life. Its not because I'm not strong, because I've always been freakishly strong, but because I'm also really heavy. Also, pullups are for girls, real men do squats, and a lot of them.
...I do a lot of squats, and I'm a girl. I'm not sure what that makes me...

OP: I can do pushups, and maybe a few pullups, but they really are difficult. I work out regularly though.
 

Jonluw

New member
May 23, 2010
7,245
0
0
Doing pull-ups isn't really a problem for me, but I've recently damaged both my wrists, so I daren't do them anymore.
 

Wolfram23

New member
Mar 23, 2004
4,095
0
0
Haven't tried in years but I used to be able to do about 10 in a row. I was a pretty fit hockey player. I was able to do 50 push ups in a row too. Last time I tried doing push ups (within a year ago) I think I only did 15 or so. Sigh...
 

Fwee

New member
Sep 23, 2009
806
0
0
They're wicked hard to do when you get started. Fortunately I went to a gym that had an assisted pull-up machine that let you reduce the difficulty. Now I can not only do raised-leg pull-ups, but inverted ones too. You hang from the bar, point your feet straight up, and then pull up. It's crazy hard but fun.
 

kasperbbs

New member
Dec 27, 2009
1,855
0
0
I started doing them when i was 14, so yeah. Haven't been doing them lately, they make my wrists hurt.
 

DoomyMcDoom

New member
Jul 4, 2008
1,411
0
0
I used to do pull ups, then I stopped training for years... I KNOW I can't do one right now, as I have a busted arm, but a week ago I may have been able to do a couple...
 

Vrach

New member
Jun 17, 2010
3,223
0
0
Yeah, I do a few before and after when I exercise. It's not really hard, you just gotta get used to it a bit, buy that thing you stick over your door and try a few times a day, you'll manage to do them in no time, I got to some 12-13 back when I was focusing on that, nowadays I can do about 8 or so.
 

omega 616

Elite Member
May 1, 2009
5,883
1
43
I used to be able to do a good number of all the basic excersizes, you know like sit up, push up, pull up etc (by good number I mean 20 - 30), so nothing amazing.

These days I could manage to do maybe 5 or 6 before crying.

EDIT: I never noticed a difference between grips, by which I mean which side of the bar my hands where on. I even did a few with crossed arms on monkey bars, put your left hand on the right hand grip and right hand on the left hand grip ... without spinning round.
 

Flames66

New member
Aug 22, 2009
2,311
0
0
I can do a small number of pull ups quite easily. I haven't done them for ages, but I just did a few to check that I was typing the truth.
 

Kizi

New member
Apr 29, 2011
276
0
0
Nope, I've tried but I just couldn't do it. Not even by trying to wiggle myself up.
I can do push-ups, though; I'm just not very good at it.
 

Phlakes

Elite Member
Mar 25, 2010
4,282
0
41
I was a tennis player, so arm strength came naturally. I could never do many, though. And I haven't played (or exercised at all) in a long time, so I don't know about right now.
 

thehorror2

New member
Jan 25, 2010
354
0
0
I dance, so although my upper body strength has never been on par with my lower body strength, it's always been significantly higher than most guys of my weight. (Lifting girls over your head, even tiny ones, takes a lot more power and control than you'd think.) So yeah, I can do pull-ups. Not a ton of them, but I can do them.
 

surg3n

New member
May 16, 2011
709
0
0
Yeah, quite easily actually, and I'm not exactly strong. Maybe all that monkey climbing I did as a kid paid off :D.
 

Nalgas D. Lemur

New member
Nov 20, 2009
1,318
0
0
omega 616 said:
I never noticed a difference between grips, by which I mean which side of the bar my hands where on. I even did a few with crossed arms on monkey bars, put your left hand on the right hand grip and right hand on the left hand grip ... without spinning round.
That's at least a little weird. For most people it's much easier with their palms facing toward them (chin-ups) and significantly harder with their palms facing away from them (pull-ups) because of which muscles you end up using.

I can still do a few, but not many or easily compared to before. Same with most other basic exercises like that. I was in great shape, but while I was sick I lost something like 30 pounds of muscle compared to back then, along with any kind of regular exercise habit I had. My wrist/hand needs to get better so I can sign up for aikido already.
 

Bravo 21

New member
May 11, 2010
745
0
0
Meh, I can do a few pull ups, but I can't do any one handed, same for push ups, though that seems to be more balance than anything.
 

DiMono

New member
Mar 18, 2010
837
0
0
Welcome to my wheelhouse: I work out regularly and know a lot of things about it.

Push-ups use your chest and triceps. Pull-ups use your back and biceps. If you do proper pull-ups, that is with your arms wider than shoulder width apart and your hands facing away from you, then you use more of your back than your arms, and because of your shoulder position you have less leverage, which makes them harder. If you do chin-ups, that is with your hands narrower than shoulder-width apart and facing you, you use more biceps than back, and have more leverage, making them easier.

If you go to a gym, there should be an assisted pull-up machine that lets you put your knees on a moving pad while doing the exercise. That will effectively reduce your weight, so you can do the pull-up motion with less weight than your bodyweight. You should also do lat pulldowns, which are basically the same motion except you're sitting down with your knees below a pad, pulling a bar down to you rather than yourself up to a bar.

Other exercises you can do to strengthen your back and make it easier to do a pull-up are single-arm rows, and pullovers. Single-arm rows involve a dumbbell and a bench: you put one knee on the bench, and the same arm as well, with your other leg out at an angle for balance, and you use your free arm to lift a dumbbell straight up and down to your chest; do it equally for both sides.

Pullovers involve lying on your back on a bench, holding a single dumbbell in both hands, but vertically; your palms should be flat on the inside of the weight load on one end of the dumbbell. Keeping your arms straight, rotate them back behind your head until the weight almost touches the ground, then, still keeping them straight, rotate them back up so your arms are vertical. Always be mindful of how much weight you're using, and if you ever feel sharp pain anywhere, stop immediately.

There are other back exercises, but they work different parts of the back than you use to do pull-ups. If you're taking working out seriously, you need to make sure that you don't overdevelop one set of muscles and ignore another, so you'll want to also work on your chest, shoulders, legs, arms, and core; the body is a unit, and you need to treat it as such.