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What this means is that rather than performing Isoscelean pushups (both hands equally spaced out from the chest and an equal distance from the feet), they instead have mastered the more difficult Pythagorean pushup, where one hand is placed above the head, with a right angle formed between the other hand and the feet
It's pretty embarrassing that the Pythagoras of pushups had never heard of Pythagorean pushups. I don't quite understand the technique as you've described it but I'll try to figure it out.
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34 sats \ 2 replies \ @Fabs 15 Aug
Dude you'll be quite the chonky boy then, ain't it?
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I hope that means something different where you live
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22 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fabs 15 Aug
Chonky as in: Mad-Muscle-Maniac
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I've just been trying them. So you have say the left hand a little bit below the shoulder, and the right hand, not so much above the head, but at the level of the head (but still out to the side). The angle from the right hand to the left hand and then down to the feet (taken as one point) forms a right angle. The hypotenuse is from your right hand down to the feet.
Of course, for balancing the exercise, the position of the hands should be interchanged after some number of reps.
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