That's like saying you injured yourself doing a heavy squat then promoting no squatting.. Weighted dips got me stronger thus allowing me to build more muscle Just gotta play it safe
Actually I was trying weighted dips for a month, I didn't see any improvement in my regular dips. Instead I got the same injury as he said. Edits :- I took comment section seriously and took advice from all the replies of good people, my dips has increased very good and weighted dips also I'm doing with good stability and no pain at all hitting the chest and muscles at point. I'm feeling my chest and triceps have grown muscular. Conclusion :- This Austin just says bad whatever him can't do good and not trying to fix the form and what him doing wrong, many of his shorts are self obsessed.
@@reganboulton1868 I followed Mike's advices for years now, never been injured, built a decent physique and still making strong progress in the gym. You don't know what you are talking about.
@@reganboulton1868He was correct on most things, just not on the exact specifics or more in depth nuances of the things he talked about, but relative to his time, he was absolutely great. But in relation to dips/ weighted dips, it’s been proven they are an amazing movement that builds power and develops the triceps, lower chest area, etc amazingly.
Been doing dips for years. This one exercise gave me upper body press strength and great gains in my chest and triceps. One man's bad experience does do not apply to all. We are all built differently.
@@researchproject034 So was I, until I wasn't. I did indeed hurt my shoulder too, but the sternum is because our bodies aren't supposed to withstand that amount of pressure at a weak point. Will you get injured? Probanly not. But if you do get injured from any exercise, this will probably be the one. It's up to you to take that risk.
@@AidenLongo maybe for your lower chest… which is much smaller and needs way less stimulation than your upper chest. Even if you arch your back a lot you are compromising your posture on the bench press. Your shoulders are not meant to press from a flat posture. They are supposed to retract. This opens up your upper chest, a problem most recreational body builders seem to have.
Costochondritis is caused by physical strain from repeated exercise. You could've just as easily developed this injury doing any chest focused exercise. It's also a relatively harmless injury that will usually go away without treatment. I'm not sure why it cost you months of progress. By your logic, any heavy repeated movement should be avoided for injury risk. Being in the gym over time increases your risk of injury in general. If you're training long enough and hard enough, you'll eventually get some bumps and bruises. If you're not training like an idiot most of those bumps and bruises will be very minor in severity. This video is fear mongering.
If he slowed them down instead of worrying about tying more plates to his cock, then I dont think CC is going to be an issue. I actually like the way the exercise stretches me out when I get it. I don't do dips much because I don't like them, but I do them when I need to sort my ribs out.
Weighted dips are a great exercise when performed with correct form. There are some people who just tell everyone what they want to hear. This guy is a prime example
He only got hurt after years so it wasnt bad form. Besides if you do a 1000 perfect form pushups you'll get injuries. My point is there is over doing it
@@tesleemhussein5217 that’s why you take deloads. Also, this is the same guy who talked about how creatine HCL was so much better because it didn’t give you water weight like creatine monohydrate then proceeds to try to sell shit to people. I don’t trust what he says
@@stavrosbeats2013 I'm not knowledgeable about street calisthenics so what's wrong with his form? If it was that bad how'd it take so long for injury or was he lucky?
@@tesleemhussein5217 look at his form at the 22nd second. He is leaning way to much. In street lifting you do dips by keeping your legs on a 90 degree angle to the ground that way the load is shared across all major upper body pushing muscles instead of all the stress being on the chest
Or do them but warm up properly, maintain good form, allow for appropriate rate of progressive overload and most importantly focus and keep tight on your recovery between workouts. People hurt themselves on long trustwd exercises all the time, it's almost never the fault of the exercise.
@@rednaxela5960comparatively yes it is one of the easiest but by itself its still quite hard, a lot of beginners wouldnt be able to weighted maybe even bodyweight
@@rednaxela5960 For skinny beginners only. You really need a lower body fat for weighted dips being a beginner. There is a good reason skinny people can do more than 30 push ups with ease.
Bad video. I can dip almost six plates and it has massively built my chest and triceps since I do it. I have never benched and I can bench 3 plates because of it. It has huge carriover to pushing skills, especially dinamic skills. It is very easy to set up and proggresively overload. It is badass and impressive, like the weighted pull up
@@Sevenineten21261 Thanks man! Yes, but I'm now doing them after HSPUs and incline presses, so I'm prioritizing other movements in which I want to get better. One day we'll get that 7 plate dip! Lol
Don't worry I actually have the same thing Austin is talking bout, but im still able to do them. Weighted DIPS are GODLY. But..... be sure that you don't progress in weight to quickly. Get more reps in. Then if absolutely necessary. At 5 lbs. Here and there.
I got the same problem as you chostocondritis or whatever is called and is the worst pain I've felt thank you for rising our awareness bro you are the best
If you do slow, full range of motion dips, like you should, with proper tucking/flaring of elbows and scapular movement, the weight is automatically dramatically reduced, as is the risk of injury. I do these super deep dips at the gym and when people doing weighted dips with 45+ lbs see it, they give it a try and can hardly do one if any. The deeper stretch definitely builds more muscle and improves flexibility/mobility too
Definitely! I too incorporate lots of deep dips with pauses as well. Working on shoulder strength and mobility is also a key player. Do your facepulls and shoulder dislocates, then you should be good to go
first time i hear someone get injured because of dips. every 3 months a dude tears his pec doing bench press my gym. weighted dips are like every exercise at the end. DONT use weights you cant control. if you cant do more than 5 reps... you should use less weight
Weighted are one of the best exercises! I used to get sternum pain like you but switched to only doing Them once a week on heavy push day and ring dips on light day!
I had Sternum pain from dips aswell. It wasn't because of heavy dipping, but of the inconsistency of the weight. Your body needs to adapt to the weight more longer than you think. I got my injury from adding more weight every session
Most people underestimate how long it takes for them to get accustomed to weighted calisthenics exercises, particularly dips... They see videos on Instagram and RUclips of guys dipping with 225 lbs. strapped to themselves then they can't wait to go out and do the same, only to soon realize this particular movement is actually way riskier than it first seems.
Interesting. Personally I love dips on the rings and I don’t plan on giving them up anytime soon. This begs one question though. Are you gonna update Beyond Bodyweight and Limitless Athletes to reflect your recent experiences and training philosophies?
Lol I got that injury doing high volume dips. Went away in like a week. The thing is you don’t even need to go heavy on dips to build muscle and strength or even do a lot of volume. I just do 1 set to failure on it and grow just as good. No over use injuries and no need for heavier weight. If normal dips are too “easy” for you. Do slow motion dips, slow rep speed where it’s almost to a crawl. And pause at the bottom half of the dip before raising yourself back up. Adding in isometrics and using all muscle no momentum will give you gains.
Yeah I agree. I mean count your body weight alone and that can be alot for most people. Theirs no wonder your getting hurt trying to do crazy weight thats not necessary to go that heavy
Agree totally... most people aren't strength exhibitionists, and strapping a ton of plates around your waist to do dips is pretty useless and unnecessary if your goal is simply developing your chest. Your own bodyweight will be more than enough to accomplish that... just do normal bodyweight progressions to increase the difficulty over time.
@@davepazz580 exactly. I can guarantee simply slowing down the rep speed is hard enough for a majority of the population. And from what I’ve seen, there are people just doing pushups that can pull impressive bench press numbers. Tao Physique and Andrew Tate can both bench slightly above 300Lbs and they just do calisthenics.
I had a quadriceps strain from heavy squats not long time ago. It was an unpleasant experience. But I would never say that squats are bad or dangerous exercises. There's no risk-free option when it comes to exercising. Dips are an amazing compound movement and do not deserve this demonization.
@@pen-sk3dx If you look beyond the headline, you'll see he never actually says to never dip again... just that doing weighted dips with his *max* weight was "useless" (and I agree with that).
The worst advice you can ever give someone is instilling fear into others from doing an exercise because it injured yoi either due to anatomy or bad form. If it doesn't work for you, great do something else. But if it works for others with no problem, let them.
@@ScorpionSuerte if you prepare properly it won't be an issue. If you jump into weighted dips without getting at least 30 clean dips without weight and you lift too much too soon, that's not the exercise's problem. Bad advice anyways. And if your anatomy doesn't allow it doesn't mean you should fear monger others from not doing it.
@@dynaspinner64 I've been doing bodybuilding for 20 years and only got two lifelong injuries, and both were caused by weighted dips. Surely if I didn't know how to exercise I'd have all sorts of injuries, from squatting, deadlifts, one arm pulls ups, single leg pistol squats with weight etc. Also, if you look at his comments, there's a disproportionate amount of people coincidentally suffering from the same injury, and shoulder injuries. You're like the guy telling people rifing a motorbike is safe because you personally never crashed, even though stats show they're 20 times more dangerous than cars
I train with 30kg weight plates on dips and I would be VERY injured if I didn't do proper warmup for that, it takes 10-15 minutes but really worth it because dips build superhuman shoulder strength
Bodyweight exercises are all you need... do them in a perfect control slow and full ROM with decent eccentric concentric phases....Do them 1 set each with a lot of variations avoiding failure... 3 times a week... don't go over 15 reps... slowly add variations but don't do long workouts... Keep your CNS fresh, don't fry it.... stimulate, don't annihilate.... you will have great body and more importantly, you will have a healthy young body....
After a year from now this guy will say," sorry I was wrong. Weighted dips are good for chest gain!" I no longer listen to these so called fitness gurus. They always dispute themselves lol
Austin, I respect you but man, just because you got injured doing a certain exercise doesn't mean other people are going to get hurt doing that exercise or that they cannot include it in their routine... I don't do handstands push ups because of wrist problems, that doesn't mean I can go tell other people "DON'T IT YOU'LL GET HURT BRO ITS NOT OPTIMAL!". Ofc not, HSPU is an excellent exercise, but in my case I stick to overhead pressing with a barbell due to training and injury history.
Like Franco Columbu said, most people don't even have control of the movements using their own bodyweight,let alone adding weight He said he didn't EVER add weight to movements like the pull up Basically get better at controlling the movement as best as possible and THEN if you decide to,add weight but don't over do it
This comment is the endgame. Appreciate someone else actually being informed and not spewing biased inaccurate info online about training. There’s enough of that already.
The thing about Franco's reasoning (and he was correct) was that he *already* did enough weighted movements for his back (bent-over rows, deadlifts, dumbbell rows, seated rows, etc.) that when he got to pull-ups, he wanted a "change-of-pace" exercise to hit his back muscles unlike the previous heavily weighted ones... Why pile on more of the same?
Some exercises are not meant for certain body types . If you have long arms , the lever arm is a lot longer . Same with long legs and squats . It’s not impossible but injury risk increases
If you do dips with proper technique (controlled descent, deep stretch, pause at the bottom) you not only prevent injury risk, you also can easily progressively overload with mininum extra weight.
I'm just gonna go ahead and say this is preference onset by a traumatic experience. A real injury will scare anybody. Everything you said is valid. Dips aren't necessary to build muscle, there are plenty solid substitutions for the muscle groups that dips emphasize... but to say someone shouldn't do them at all is a bit outlandish
I've seen how you dip and it's because you don't retract your scapula instead you lazily keep it protracted to not fight back gravity and to just contract the chest. That's the price that is payed when someone has no form, plus it does it weighted for years. Same with weighted pull-ups. People don't want to retract their scapulas before weighted pulls or pushes or even the non weighted ones. That's the price. I know many people around your height or more diping much more than you for reps, not much older than you they dip weighted for years and they never had any problems. If a bodyweight dip, executed properly, doesn't craze injuries, why a weighted one should? Exactly, it shouldn't. Bad form on top of weights for years, of course you got injured.
An injury isn’t a good reason to totally remove a movement from your routine. Learn management your volume, intensity and frequency. Periodize your training and de-load on a regular basis and you should good for the long term
But after you realize you really don't need that particular movement in your routine to achieve the results you're looking for, what would be the point?
@@davepazz580 For sure! It all comes to down to your individual goals. I was speaking on the context of someone actually desiring to get stronger at weighted dips. But if doesn't apply to you, there are many alternatives out there.
Weighted dips are one of the greatest exercises. My only issue is that they don't target the long head of the triceps well, and you need to add upper chest exercises; otherwise, the lower chest will be much more developed. Apart from that, dips are an OP exercise.
Actually this is really helpful for me to know because I have had costochondritis before and have an increased risk of it because of pectus, this is good enough reason for me to avoid weighted dips
There is a reason why costochondritis can happen in weighted dips. Say when you try to pull your elbows above your shoulder while doing it in a straight body (which means in an upright form in dips), your chest stretches at max and you wouldn't reach your elbows above your shoulders with your body straight. Not only it constantly keeps stressing your chest with heavy weights, you're moving your whole body including your ribcage. But by rounding your body and even leaning forward, you can safely do weighted dips 90 degrees while at the same time not stressing the chest. Unless you're costochondritis is not from weighted dips and you have it for a while, his form is the reason why he got injured.
So you got an injury doing a certain exercise and now preach to the world that it’s a useless exercise because you got injured. I’m willing to bet you increased your weight to a level you weren’t ready for, causing you to perform the dip with poor body mechanics. The pressure when to your inner chest (tendons/joints) because the muscles that you were supposed to engage were not engaged.
I avoided weighted dips for years but just started doing them again. It was actually the only exercise to really injure me - have had costocondritis for ~10 years since then, sternum would get inflamed, chest would pop/crack in a painful way. I was pretty in shape around then but got skinny after not working out for 8 years. I started doing weighted dips again BUT with better form. So far so good. The key for me was that I didn't really understand how to brace my core properly back then. I would tense my abs/certain core muscles, but my body wasn't stacked properly. The main change I've made is that I don't flare my ribs anymore. When the bottom of the ribs start to tilt forward (and the sternum starts to point more towards the sky), the core isn't being used properly. Then you're leaning forward more, your butt goes back in the opposite direction, and injury is inevitable. I make sure to tuck my ribs down and back, squeeze my glutes so my pelvis comes forward (but lined up with my ribs/rest of my body), and then make sure my shoulders are down throughout the whole movement. To keep my shoulders down/protracted, the missing thing for me was an underutilized serratus anterior which I've been working on. Anyways, when I now keep everything tight and aligned this way, dips feel MUCH better to me. I can tell my triceps and chest are going to be HUUUGE soon.
Came back to this after a year of consistently doing heavy weighted dips 2x a week. I used to think you were being dramatic because you weren't careful and put the blame on the exercise instead. Couldn't have been more wrong. Like i was saying, I went from +35kg 1rm to +1x bodyweight(70kg). Hit the pr today. However, im considering leaving dips on the side from now on because today, i experienced the most amount of sudden sternum pain so far. Im guessing it is because of how heavy i went today, while having just recovered from being very sick. I did not(thankfully), get an injury like yours, however, all these random sternum pains that ive experienced over the past 2 months+today's experience, made me rethink my view on the dip. So, if you read this far(tldr ik), you were right(kinda). I still think the dip is top tier, but yeah, it indeed is really hard on the sternum.
I agree with him. Some exercises are just injury prone and a bit risky. I think they are cool every now and then but you can get a better range of motion and a better mind muscle connection with a seated dip imo. Plus there are better exercises if you really want your triceps to pop.
In all your dip clips your posture is incorrect, you cannount hunch over when descending you will get the pain in your sternum. How i know? I got slight pain doing it wrong
Variation + bang for your buck. Although to be fair, sometimes the dip simply doesn't work for you and you have to look elsewhere to grow the pressing muscles. warm up to them - with assisted variation if you're a bit of a heavyweight then build them up , limit them to twice or at least thrice a week and add loading variations.
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That’s like getting injured from bench pressing then making a video about bench pressing being useless
no, the same happend to me, bench press is less likely to injure you
Weighted dips are one of the best exercises
Mike mentzer-
Facts
But are they necessary...
@@davepazz580 depends on your goals/standards in life
@@Ello3342exactly, their not necessary
That's like saying you injured yourself doing a heavy squat then promoting no squatting..
Weighted dips got me stronger thus allowing me to build more muscle
Just gotta play it safe
A bad injury changes a man at his core. Comeback here after you snap something.
Actually I was trying weighted dips for a month, I didn't see any improvement in my regular dips. Instead I got the same injury as he said.
Edits :- I took comment section seriously and took advice from all the replies of good people, my dips has increased very good and weighted dips also I'm doing with good stability and no pain at all hitting the chest and muscles at point. I'm feeling my chest and triceps have grown muscular.
Conclusion :- This Austin just says bad whatever him can't do good and not trying to fix the form and what him doing wrong, many of his shorts are self obsessed.
exactly loool
@@mystery_mman^ what he said
not this mf exactly lol, i didnt see him 🤦🏻♂️
weighted dips is squat of upper body 👑
Like Mike Mentzer once said.
@@ruan441mike was wrong about most things tho tbf
@@reganboulton1868 I followed Mike's advices for years now, never been injured, built a decent physique and still making strong progress in the gym. You don't know what you are talking about.
@@reganboulton1868He was correct on most things, just not on the exact specifics or more in depth nuances of the things he talked about, but relative to his time, he was absolutely great. But in relation to dips/ weighted dips, it’s been proven they are an amazing movement that builds power and develops the triceps, lower chest area, etc amazingly.
He said dips not weighted
"I got injured like a dumbass si don't do dips guys "
He means don't do them daily.
@@DivineLogos and I mean... Humor?
@@gregorypigeon1329 Oh okay.
Shit wasnt funny
@@rednaxela5960 than don't laugh or giggle and move on😁
Been doing dips for years. This one exercise gave me upper body press strength and great gains in my chest and triceps. One man's bad experience does do not apply to all. We are all built differently.
It's a common injury if going very heavy. It happened to me too
@@ScorpionSuertehow much weight were y doing
@@Bigbiceps301 70kg
@@ScorpionSuerteCould lack of shoulder mobility be the culprit? I just maxed out at 70KG on weighted dips and I'm fine
@@researchproject034 So was I, until I wasn't. I did indeed hurt my shoulder too, but the sternum is because our bodies aren't supposed to withstand that amount of pressure at a weak point. Will you get injured? Probanly not. But if you do get injured from any exercise, this will probably be the one. It's up to you to take that risk.
Weighted dips > bench press
Nah
Both are great tbh
Dips are great, but for chest, bench press is way better than dips bro
@@AidenLongo maybe for your lower chest… which is much smaller and needs way less stimulation than your upper chest. Even if you arch your back a lot you are compromising your posture on the bench press. Your shoulders are not meant to press from a flat posture. They are supposed to retract. This opens up your upper chest, a problem most recreational body builders seem to have.
Both are good exercises. Both/either can have better carry over than the other to specific strength skills depending what ur goal is.
Costochondritis is caused by physical strain from repeated exercise. You could've just as easily developed this injury doing any chest focused exercise. It's also a relatively harmless injury that will usually go away without treatment. I'm not sure why it cost you months of progress. By your logic, any heavy repeated movement should be avoided for injury risk. Being in the gym over time increases your risk of injury in general. If you're training long enough and hard enough, you'll eventually get some bumps and bruises. If you're not training like an idiot most of those bumps and bruises will be very minor in severity. This video is fear mongering.
I wholeheartedly agree and I’m 45 and been doing weighted dips for years just slow and controlled wins the race bro💯
If he slowed them down instead of worrying about tying more plates to his cock, then I dont think CC is going to be an issue. I actually like the way the exercise stretches me out when I get it. I don't do dips much because I don't like them, but I do them when I need to sort my ribs out.
True but dips place more pressure on the sternum and the joints connected to it and are far more likely to result in Costo
Weighted dips are a great exercise when performed with correct form.
There are some people who just tell everyone what they want to hear. This guy is a prime example
He only got hurt after years so it wasnt bad form. Besides if you do a 1000 perfect form pushups you'll get injuries. My point is there is over doing it
@@tesleemhussein5217 that’s why you take deloads. Also, this is the same guy who talked about how creatine HCL was so much better because it didn’t give you water weight like creatine monohydrate then proceeds to try to sell shit to people. I don’t trust what he says
@@tesleemhussein5217bro what are you talking about. Show someone who does street lifting his form on this video and I bet they'll laugh at the guy
@@stavrosbeats2013 I'm not knowledgeable about street calisthenics so what's wrong with his form? If it was that bad how'd it take so long for injury or was he lucky?
@@tesleemhussein5217 look at his form at the 22nd second. He is leaning way to much. In street lifting you do dips by keeping your legs on a 90 degree angle to the ground that way the load is shared across all major upper body pushing muscles instead of all the stress being on the chest
Bro I got big asf off weighted dips tf outta here
Imagine trying to shit on an exercise that is a staple in weighted calisthenics just because you got injured while doing it with poor form
"If you go too heavy for too long..."
Sounds more like a loading and programming issue. You can get injured with any exercise if you ego lift.
So in other words I probably shouldn't be doing +150 lb weighted dips while I'm sitting at a body weight of 150 lb.
You should build up to a 400lb total my guy.
Or you probably shouldn't be doing weighted dips at all...
@@rafah-eltalle8690sounds like a plan
Or do them but warm up properly, maintain good form, allow for appropriate rate of progressive overload and most importantly focus and keep tight on your recovery between workouts. People hurt themselves on long trustwd exercises all the time, it's almost never the fault of the exercise.
there is absolutely nothing wrong with being able to add your bodyweight in plates so long as you progressed up to it steadily
Did he just say weighted dips are great for beginners?😂
When beginners can barely do body weight dips
he's dumb 😂
Weigjted dips are like the easiest weighted callisthenics exercise
@@rednaxela5960comparatively yes it is one of the easiest but by itself its still quite hard, a lot of beginners wouldnt be able to weighted maybe even bodyweight
@@rednaxela5960 For skinny beginners only. You really need a lower body fat for weighted dips being a beginner. There is a good reason skinny people can do more than 30 push ups with ease.
@@rednaxela5960weighted push ups? weighted planks?
L take bro dips>>>>>
Man I love doing weighted dips
Bad video. I can dip almost six plates and it has massively built my chest and triceps since I do it. I have never benched and I can bench 3 plates because of it. It has huge carriover to pushing skills, especially dinamic skills. It is very easy to set up and proggresively overload. It is badass and impressive, like the weighted pull up
Nothing to add here, just facts
6 plates is mental! Are you still doing dips today my friend
@@Sevenineten21261 Thanks man!
Yes, but I'm now doing them after HSPUs and incline presses, so I'm prioritizing other movements in which I want to get better. One day we'll get that 7 plate dip! Lol
Weighted dips are probably the best calisthenics exercise tbh you’re just not built for them I guess
Pull uns with rings is the best
I love weighted dips😢
Then do it dont listen to this dork
Keep doing them me too
Don't worry I actually have the same thing Austin is talking bout, but im still able to do them. Weighted DIPS are GODLY. But..... be sure that you don't progress in weight to quickly. Get more reps in. Then if absolutely necessary. At 5 lbs. Here and there.
The problem is some people like the weight more than they do the actual movement and start overemphasizing the weight too much...
@@davepazz580 exactly bro can't agree more
I got the same problem as you chostocondritis or whatever is called and is the worst pain I've felt thank you for rising our awareness bro you are the best
The biggest/strongest my chest/arms/shoulders got is when I added weighted dips to my routine last year. Felt like a cheat code.
If you do slow, full range of motion dips, like you should, with proper tucking/flaring of elbows and scapular movement, the weight is automatically dramatically reduced, as is the risk of injury. I do these super deep dips at the gym and when people doing weighted dips with 45+ lbs see it, they give it a try and can hardly do one if any. The deeper stretch definitely builds more muscle and improves flexibility/mobility too
Definitely! I too incorporate lots of deep dips with pauses as well. Working on shoulder strength and mobility is also a key player. Do your facepulls and shoulder dislocates, then you should be good to go
first time i hear someone get injured because of dips.
every 3 months a dude tears his pec doing bench press my gym.
weighted dips are like every exercise at the end.
DONT use weights you cant control. if you cant do more than 5 reps... you should use less weight
Bad info. Do dips. They are the squat of the upper body. No exceptions. 3 plates is excessive...
Weighted dips is greatest exercise of upper body
Dips are the best upper body pushing excercise
Weighted dips and incline bench for the chest
Ian barseagle whould laugh at this 😂😂😂
Weighted are one of the best exercises! I used to get sternum pain like you but switched to only doing Them once a week on heavy push day and ring dips on light day!
Im still trying to get off the assisted dip let alone weighted dips lol
disregard this guy. Keep at it bro
Weighted dips are great ,just make sure your using proper form
"it's great for beginners"
Right? I been in the gym for more than 6 months and im maybe hitting 5 clean reps lmao
@@kranx2690 yea and he said weighted dips, not normal dips which is even worse for beginners
Beginners are lucky to do assisted dips, let alone weighted, tf is he talking about. 😂
@@staringinthevoid exactly
You did dips dirty man. They're an amazing exercise! After all they did fo you... you stabbed them in the back, spet on them :'-(
This guy doesn’t always give good advice
I’ve had that same injury and it definitely wasn’t weighted dips that caused it
What caused it?
@@kamarmclean5518 heavy contact to the chest/lung area
I had Sternum pain from dips aswell. It wasn't because of heavy dipping, but of the inconsistency of the weight. Your body needs to adapt to the weight more longer than you think. I got my injury from adding more weight every session
Most people underestimate how long it takes for them to get accustomed to weighted calisthenics exercises, particularly dips...
They see videos on Instagram and RUclips of guys dipping with 225 lbs. strapped to themselves then they can't wait to go out and do the same, only to soon realize this particular movement is actually way riskier than it first seems.
Interesting. Personally I love dips on the rings and I don’t plan on giving them up anytime soon.
This begs one question though. Are you gonna update Beyond Bodyweight and Limitless Athletes to reflect your recent experiences and training philosophies?
My favourite and best exercise. Been doing them for 35 years and never been injured.
35 years of gym? respect
Lol I got that injury doing high volume dips. Went away in like a week. The thing is you don’t even need to go heavy on dips to build muscle and strength or even do a lot of volume. I just do 1 set to failure on it and grow just as good. No over use injuries and no need for heavier weight. If normal dips are too “easy” for you. Do slow motion dips, slow rep speed where it’s almost to a crawl. And pause at the bottom half of the dip before raising yourself back up. Adding in isometrics and using all muscle no momentum will give you gains.
Yeah I agree. I mean count your body weight alone and that can be alot for most people. Theirs no wonder your getting hurt trying to do crazy weight thats not necessary to go that heavy
Agree totally... most people aren't strength exhibitionists, and strapping a ton of plates around your waist to do dips is pretty useless and unnecessary if your goal is simply developing your chest.
Your own bodyweight will be more than enough to accomplish that... just do normal bodyweight progressions to increase the difficulty over time.
@@davepazz580 exactly. I can guarantee simply slowing down the rep speed is hard enough for a majority of the population. And from what I’ve seen, there are people just doing pushups that can pull impressive bench press numbers. Tao Physique and Andrew Tate can both bench slightly above 300Lbs and they just do calisthenics.
I had a quadriceps strain from heavy squats not long time ago. It was an unpleasant experience. But I would never say that squats are bad or dangerous exercises. There's no risk-free option when it comes to exercising. Dips are an amazing compound movement and do not deserve this demonization.
you got injured doesn't mean the exercise is useless,your form is useless.
This is not scientific advice. This is anecdotal advice.
Do you think you were not properly warmed up?
He 100% was not properly warmed up. This video is a classic social media video. Attention grabbing headline, followed by biased inaccurate information
Yep pretty much this “weighted dips are bad but my program is good so buy it”
@@pen-sk3dx If you look beyond the headline, you'll see he never actually says to never dip again... just that doing weighted dips with his *max* weight was "useless" (and I agree with that).
This sounds like a personal problem tbh
“I got injured so you definitely will too”
Ian barseagle one of the expert in calisthenics got bigger chest by doing only weighted dips and he got beast strength
The worst advice you can ever give someone is instilling fear into others from doing an exercise because it injured yoi either due to anatomy or bad form. If it doesn't work for you, great do something else. But if it works for others with no problem, let them.
It's a common injury, if you lift heavy. It happened to me, plus I permanently damaged my shoulder joint.
@@ScorpionSuerte if you prepare properly it won't be an issue. If you jump into weighted dips without getting at least 30 clean dips without weight and you lift too much too soon, that's not the exercise's problem. Bad advice anyways.
And if your anatomy doesn't allow it doesn't mean you should fear monger others from not doing it.
@@dynaspinner64 I've been doing bodybuilding for 20 years and only got two lifelong injuries, and both were caused by weighted dips. Surely if I didn't know how to exercise I'd have all sorts of injuries, from squatting, deadlifts, one arm pulls ups, single leg pistol squats with weight etc. Also, if you look at his comments, there's a disproportionate amount of people coincidentally suffering from the same injury, and shoulder injuries. You're like the guy telling people rifing a motorbike is safe because you personally never crashed, even though stats show they're 20 times more dangerous than cars
You’re the only person to have this view. ‘Oooh look at me, i got injured doing this exercise so it must be useless’
I train with 30kg weight plates on dips and I would be VERY injured if I didn't do proper warmup for that, it takes 10-15 minutes but really worth it because dips build superhuman shoulder strength
People seem to think an exercise is dangerous when they load up more weight than they can handle and end up injuring themselves
Dips are fine. I don't do them because I get sternum pain and I don't want it to crack. If u get no pain and do them correctly, they're great
Weighted dips are like top 3-4 fun exercises hello.
Bodyweight exercises are all you need... do them in a perfect control slow and full ROM with decent eccentric concentric phases....Do them 1 set each with a lot of variations avoiding failure... 3 times a week... don't go over 15 reps... slowly add variations but don't do long workouts... Keep your CNS fresh, don't fry it.... stimulate, don't annihilate.... you will have great body and more importantly, you will have a healthy young body....
After a year from now this guy will say," sorry I was wrong. Weighted dips are good for chest gain!"
I no longer listen to these so called fitness gurus. They always dispute themselves lol
Tell that to Ian Barseagle
Bro built his lower chest with dips and now telling us that 😂
RE-Edit : "EGO lifting 3 Plates is useless!"😂
Hey guys, dips hurt me so that means it's also going to hurt you and doesn't work!
It's like just because some guy got rejected after asking a girl out doesn't mean you'll also get rejected too. Do the weighted dips guys.
I have this injury since 2 years ago and I don't know what to do get get released from this injury .
Austin, I respect you but man, just because you got injured doing a certain exercise doesn't mean other people are going to get hurt doing that exercise or that they cannot include it in their routine...
I don't do handstands push ups because of wrist problems, that doesn't mean I can go tell other people "DON'T IT YOU'LL GET HURT BRO ITS NOT OPTIMAL!". Ofc not, HSPU is an excellent exercise, but in my case I stick to overhead pressing with a barbell due to training and injury history.
I stopped dips ages ago and couldn’t be happier
You just gotta make sure you going down controlled and to a range comfortable for you. Recommend warming up shoulders with band or light dumbbell 😃
Like Franco Columbu said, most people don't even have control of the movements using their own bodyweight,let alone adding weight
He said he didn't EVER add weight to movements like the pull up
Basically get better at controlling the movement as best as possible and THEN if you decide to,add weight but don't over do it
This comment is the endgame. Appreciate someone else actually being informed and not spewing biased inaccurate info online about training. There’s enough of that already.
@tylergary5953 Thanks brother 🙏🏼🙏🏼
The thing about Franco's reasoning (and he was correct) was that he *already* did enough weighted movements for his back (bent-over rows, deadlifts, dumbbell rows, seated rows, etc.) that when he got to pull-ups, he wanted a "change-of-pace" exercise to hit his back muscles unlike the previous heavily weighted ones...
Why pile on more of the same?
When Austin Dunham talks about weighted calisthenics, you listen.
Some exercises are not meant for certain body types . If you have long arms , the lever arm is a lot longer . Same with long legs and squats . It’s not impossible but injury risk increases
Just because you got injured doesn't make it useless. Bench press causes more injuries
Opinions are like assholes.
We all have them and they all STINK
Weighted dips=Batman
If you do dips with proper technique (controlled descent, deep stretch, pause at the bottom) you not only prevent injury risk, you also can easily progressively overload with mininum extra weight.
Thats like saying doing deadlifts can injure your back. Its not the exercise, its the user.
I'm just gonna go ahead and say this is preference onset by a traumatic experience. A real injury will scare anybody. Everything you said is valid. Dips aren't necessary to build muscle, there are plenty solid substitutions for the muscle groups that dips emphasize... but to say someone shouldn't do them at all is a bit outlandish
LOL CHOSTOCHONDRITIS. that's just inflammation of the cartilage in the ribs. Its not serious. take an ibuprofen for a few weeks and get back into it
“A mosquito bit me in a steak restaurant”
The guy in the video:
10 reasons why you should not eat meat
engage your lower traps and back in dips to prevent costochondritis
Liu xiadong chinese Olympian utilizes the weighted dips
I've seen how you dip and it's because you don't retract your scapula instead you lazily keep it protracted to not fight back gravity and to just contract the chest. That's the price that is payed when someone has no form, plus it does it weighted for years. Same with weighted pull-ups. People don't want to retract their scapulas before weighted pulls or pushes or even the non weighted ones. That's the price. I know many people around your height or more diping much more than you for reps, not much older than you they dip weighted for years and they never had any problems. If a bodyweight dip, executed properly, doesn't craze injuries, why a weighted one should? Exactly, it shouldn't. Bad form on top of weights for years, of course you got injured.
An injury isn’t a good reason to totally remove a movement from your routine. Learn management your volume, intensity and frequency. Periodize your training and de-load on a regular basis and you should good for the long term
But after you realize you really don't need that particular movement in your routine to achieve the results you're looking for, what would be the point?
@@davepazz580 For sure! It all comes to down to your individual goals. I was speaking on the context of someone actually desiring to get stronger at weighted dips. But if doesn't apply to you, there are many alternatives out there.
Weighted dips are one of the greatest exercises. My only issue is that they don't target the long head of the triceps well, and you need to add upper chest exercises; otherwise, the lower chest will be much more developed. Apart from that, dips are an OP exercise.
Wow, that sucks, my body responds well to weighted dips.
I injured myself doing deadlifts using bad form and I haven't touch the deadlift ever since. I think is just a mental thing.
Actually this is really helpful for me to know because I have had costochondritis before and have an increased risk of it because of pectus, this is good enough reason for me to avoid weighted dips
There is a reason why costochondritis can happen in weighted dips. Say when you try to pull your elbows above your shoulder while doing it in a straight body (which means in an upright form in dips), your chest stretches at max and you wouldn't reach your elbows above your shoulders with your body straight. Not only it constantly keeps stressing your chest with heavy weights, you're moving your whole body including your ribcage. But by rounding your body and even leaning forward, you can safely do weighted dips 90 degrees while at the same time not stressing the chest. Unless you're costochondritis is not from weighted dips and you have it for a while, his form is the reason why he got injured.
@@gernil6216 Thanks bro good to know
So you got an injury doing a certain exercise and now preach to the world that it’s a useless exercise because you got injured. I’m willing to bet you increased your weight to a level you weren’t ready for, causing you to perform the dip with poor body mechanics. The pressure when to your inner chest (tendons/joints) because the muscles that you were supposed to engage were not engaged.
I avoided weighted dips for years but just started doing them again. It was actually the only exercise to really injure me - have had costocondritis for ~10 years since then, sternum would get inflamed, chest would pop/crack in a painful way.
I was pretty in shape around then but got skinny after not working out for 8 years. I started doing weighted dips again BUT with better form. So far so good. The key for me was that I didn't really understand how to brace my core properly back then. I would tense my abs/certain core muscles, but my body wasn't stacked properly.
The main change I've made is that I don't flare my ribs anymore. When the bottom of the ribs start to tilt forward (and the sternum starts to point more towards the sky), the core isn't being used properly. Then you're leaning forward more, your butt goes back in the opposite direction, and injury is inevitable.
I make sure to tuck my ribs down and back, squeeze my glutes so my pelvis comes forward (but lined up with my ribs/rest of my body), and then make sure my shoulders are down throughout the whole movement. To keep my shoulders down/protracted, the missing thing for me was an underutilized serratus anterior which I've been working on.
Anyways, when I now keep everything tight and aligned this way, dips feel MUCH better to me. I can tell my triceps and chest are going to be HUUUGE soon.
Not a single elute gymnast or wrestler would agree with this lol
Handstand push up>Weighted dips
More people get injured benching heavy than by doing weighted dips.
Came back to this after a year of consistently doing heavy weighted dips 2x a week. I used to think you were being dramatic because you weren't careful and put the blame on the exercise instead. Couldn't have been more wrong.
Like i was saying, I went from +35kg 1rm to +1x bodyweight(70kg). Hit the pr today. However, im considering leaving dips on the side from now on because today, i experienced the most amount of sudden sternum pain so far. Im guessing it is because of how heavy i went today, while having just recovered from being very sick.
I did not(thankfully), get an injury like yours, however, all these random sternum pains that ive experienced over the past 2 months+today's experience, made me rethink my view on the dip.
So, if you read this far(tldr ik), you were right(kinda). I still think the dip is top tier, but yeah, it indeed is really hard on the sternum.
I am 43 years old and I have a 500 lb max bench press because of dips
It's always better to go for high reps on the weighted dips. It's just an exercise that puts too much stress on the body.
Very solid advice i have had the same problem still though equipment or not dips and weighted are one of the most effective exercises a man can do
Yeah i agree. It's useless. It overdeveloped my lower chest and triceps to a point, i had to stop training dips. I was getting too big. Very useless
Just alternate exercises and intensities/volume, smart programming, not avoiding. Weighted dips are one of the best exercises
I agree with him. Some exercises are just injury prone and a bit risky. I think they are cool every now and then but you can get a better range of motion and a better mind muscle connection with a seated dip imo. Plus there are better exercises if you really want your triceps to pop.
Nah weighted dips are one of the best exercises for building push strength. Just need to focus on good form and learn not to overdo it
weighted dips were one of my favorite until they gave me tennis elbow injury
And this is why I round my upper body primarily not to target chest for reps
In all your dip clips your posture is incorrect, you cannount hunch over when descending you will get the pain in your sternum. How i know? I got slight pain doing it wrong
“Isholashionsh”
Variation + bang for your buck. Although to be fair, sometimes the dip simply doesn't work for you and you have to look elsewhere to grow the pressing muscles.
warm up to them - with assisted variation if you're a bit of a heavyweight then build them up , limit them to twice or at least thrice a week and add loading variations.