Why the Theater Floor Is Always Sticky

Why the Theater Floor Is Always Sticky

If you have ever wondered why the theater floor is always so sticky...

An amorous Texas couple was arrested after they were caught having the secks inside a multiplex movie theater in San Antonio.

Despite their innocuous explanation - "We were just having a little fun!" - the duo was charged with public lewdness, to be released on a $3200 bond.

My first thought when I heard of this:

What movie was it?

The new Blade Runner remake?

I guess seeing an old Harrison Ford still assassinating androids after all these years gets some people's juices flowin' like the Nile.

Anyhoo, some ​guys could use a little stickiness in their training as well...

Here's what I mean:

Lotsa athletes go their entire lives without reaching the point where you're lifting weights ​heavy enough that your grip becomes the weakest link in your body.

If you're one of them, this won't apply to you.

But once you're moving decent poundages, your grip and forearm strength will be the limiting factor in your lifts.

It's actually unsafe to lift weights where your grip could give ​out. You never want the bar to slip out of your hands during an explosive Olympic lift like a power clean or snatch. Or during a heavy strength movement where a slippery bar could cause a shift in optimal lifting form, leading to injury. Like the bench press or deadlift.

How can you prevent that?

By using chalk.

The formula is simple:

Chalk = stronger grip = heavier weights = stronger.

However, many public gyms ban the use of chalk because it makes a mess.

The solution?

Liquid chalk. I buy mine at a rock climbing store for 10 bucks a bottle.

But like I mentioned, not too many athletes ever build remarkable levels of leg, back, chest and shoulder strength that overpowers what their grip can handle.

So in that sense, if you notice the rest of your body could lift bigger weights than what you can hold in your hands -- it's a good problem to have.

And practically one every hockey player who follows the workouts in Next Level Hockey Training 2.0 experiences.

If you, too, want to gain impressive​ full-body strength like that, then come grasp it with your hot, sticky-icky hands at:

http://www.NextLevelHockeyTraining.com

Yunus Barisik

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Yunus Barisik
 

Yunus Barisik, CSCS, specializes in making hockey players strong, fast and explosive. He has trained 500+ hockey players at the junior, college and pro levels, including NHL Draft picks and World Champions. An accomplished author, Yunus has had articles published on top fitness and performance sites, including T Nation, STACK and Muscle & Strength. He also wrote Next Level Hockey Training, a comprehensive resource for ice hockey players on building athletic strength, size and power, while staying injury-free.

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