Strength In A Time of Corona

Jesse Schmidt • March 19, 2020
A man is doing push ups on the floor in a living room

You might not know this but the difference between an exercise that builds strength and one that doesn’t is as stark as being under quarantine or not. And when you learn the difference you’ll know when to focus on strength, and when to avoid strength exercises, like avoiding the Covid cough coming from that guy over on aisle 4.

It’s called “positive failure,” and it’s every bit as inspirational as the moniker suggests. What it means is whenever you’re doing an exercise you should try to perform it to the point where you can’t lift the weight anymore.

For example: You do 10 push-ups and after the 10th one you try for an 11th and fail on the positive (lifting portion of the movement).

If you’re not reaching positive failure on your exercises, you’re still doing great. You’re elevating your heart rate and your lungs are working, which is generally good for your health. You’re just not necessarily stimulating any new strength in your body, as Dr. Wayne Westcott told the New York Times and Truth Not Trends in podcast episode #28 .

Then comes the important part: write down the results! For your strength training to be working, you should be measurably stronger each time you workout. So if you failed after your 10th push-up in your last workout, you should be able to get at least 11 the next workout. If you can’t beat your performance from last time, you may need to take more rest between workouts.

Here’s what I recommend starting with:

1) 2x/week workouts with at least 2-3 days’ rest in between. I.e. Mon/Thurs or Tues/Fri.

2) Move slowly while performing your exercises. Think 5 seconds lifting and 5 seconds lowering. Do as many reps as you can until you can’t do any more. Do at least 1 set as hard as you can.

3) Corona Full-Body Strength Program: 1) Wall sit 2) Bulgarian squat 3) Single leg calf raise 4) Push-up 5) Pull-up/row 6) Flutter kick 7) Superwoman

These exercises are designed to be doable at home with no equipment. If you have dumbbells or other equipment around, by all means, add some exercises to the mix!

The row can be tricky to maneuver if you don’t have a pull up bar or any equipment at home so you may need to look for a railing to use ( or check out this row video ). Modify the push-ups by doing them from your knees or doing negatives to failure (lowering yourself to the ground and using your knees to climb back up).

Have fun (and be safe) with this and remember the wise words of Muhammad Ali who said, “I only start counting when it starts hurting because those are the only ones that count.”

Note: For more great strength training info check out the TNT website and subscribe to the Truth Not Trends podcast on any major podcast platform!

Experience the TNT Strength difference with a free workout.

START YOUR FITNESS TRANSFORMATION WITH A

FREE WORKOUT

Complete the form and we'll set up an appointment for you.

Recent Articles

By Liam "TAKU" Bauer June 8, 2026
The leaner and fitter you become, the fewer calories the same workout burns. Learn why this happens and how TNT Strength Oakland uses unaccustomed stimulus to keep your body adapting.
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer June 1, 2026
Why anaerobic threshold matters more than VO₂ max for real-world fitness. TNT Strength in Oakland's Rockridge & North Berkeley shows how to train it.
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer May 25, 2026
TNT Strength Oakland explains why resistance training is essential for bone density, metabolic health, cognitive function, and independence as we age.
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer May 18, 2026
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer Estimated Reading Time: 7 minutes
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer May 11, 2026
Skills are specific, strength is general. Learn the SAID Principle, skill transfer, and why TNT Strength Oakland is tool agnostic—so you can build a stronger foundation for life.
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer May 4, 2026
Menopause doesn't mean weakness. Learn how strength training, protein, and recovery can fight muscle loss, fat gain, and bone decline. TNT Strength, Oakland's Rockridge gym.
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer April 27, 2026
Think slow reps build more muscle? TNT Strength's Liam "TAKU" Bauer breaks down the science of mechanical tension, effort, and intent — for Oakland and East Bay lifters who want real results.
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer April 20, 2026
Do you really need to squat to build strong legs? TNT Strength's Liam "TAKU" Bauer breaks down the myth of the barbell squat and what actually works for Oakland-area adults training for strength and longevity.
By Liam "TAKU" Bauer April 13, 2026
Think a calorie is just a calorie? TNT Strength's Liam "TAKU" Bauer breaks down how hormones, metabolism, and food quality drive real fat loss — not just math.