“The 22 Psychological Triggers That Make Women Chase You… Starting Tonight”

Forget the cash, the cars, and the chiseled jawlines. Female desire operates on a completely different frequency. Primal. Subconscious. Triggers that bypass her logic and hit her on a gut level. Most guys are totally blind to them.

I know because I was one of them. The overthinking. The paralysis. The silent drive home kicking yourself for freezing up. Watching average guys walk away with the girl while you stood there stuck in your own head.

Then I decoded the psychology behind what actually makes women tick. 22 hard rules.  Subtle behavioral shifts that rewired my entire reality. The anxiety evaporated. Women started leaning in. Investing. Chasing.

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Wilko

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Hey hey! Glad to see this thread didn't get ignored entirely. Hate it when good content gets buried.

Reykhel, I won't bore you with a blow by blow - but I did come to one interesting conclusion about bodyweight training.

Inverted Rows > Pull Ups... kind of

I personally found that there was no way for me to get in an effective (muscle-building) volume of pull-ups without frying my connective tissues. Form tweaks just shifted the stress around; if my bicep tendons weren't inflamed then my upper lat insertions would give me all kinds of grief.

Haven't had the same problem with inverted rows, and I think that's as much to do with the angle of pull as it is the reduced load.

Pull Ups will always be more impressive, but as a training stimulus I think inverted rows have some big advantages.
 

amazingswayze

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Hey hey! Glad to see this thread didn't get ignored entirely. Hate it when good content gets buried.

Reykhel, I won't bore you with a blow by blow - but I did come to one interesting conclusion about bodyweight training.

Inverted Rows > Pull Ups... kind of

I personally found that there was no way for me to get in an effective (muscle-building) volume of pull-ups without frying my connective tissues. Form tweaks just shifted the stress around; if my bicep tendons weren't inflamed then my upper lat insertions would give me all kinds of grief.

Haven't had the same problem with inverted rows, and I think that's as much to do with the angle of pull as it is the reduced load.

Pull Ups will always be more impressive, but as a training stimulus I think inverted rows have some big advantages.
I've never imagined this perspective but considering that I've done both, I must agree with you. Pull ups are impressive but rather vicious on the body. I think more people should practice the inverted row, even though it looks ridiculous.
 
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