Upper Body Strength
Upper body strength covers the fundamental pressing and pulling patterns — bench press, overhead press, pull-ups, rows. These compound movements build the shoulders, chest, back, and arms while training the body to stabilize under load.
Fitness Considerations
Most people push more than they pull — bench press without enough rowing, overhead press without pull-ups. This creates anterior dominance: rounded shoulders, tight pecs, weak upper back. Aim for at least a 1:1 ratio of pushing to pulling volume. When in doubt, pull more.
The shoulder joint trades stability for mobility. Heavy pressing without adequate warm-up and mobility work is the fastest route to impingement. Always warm up with upper body mobility before pressing, and include rotator cuff work weekly.
Grip is often the limiting factor in pulling movements — if you can’t hold it, you can’t lift it. Dead hangs, farmer carries, and grip-focused finishers build the forearm strength that supports everything else.
Exercises
| # | Exercise | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 31.01 | Bench Press | The barbell bench press builds pressing strength through the chest, shoulders, and triceps |
| 31.02 | Pull-Ups | The pull-up builds upper back, lat, and arm strength |