O&N
A Long-Term Plan

The Program

For two people who decided to start.
Built to last years, not weeks.

You are:
Chapter One

How to use this

Three days a week, alternating two workouts. Twenty to thirty minutes. Walk every day.

  • Train 3 days a week, alternating Workout A and Workout B
  • Always leave at least one rest day between sessions
  • Week one is A – B – A. Week two is B – A – B. And so on.
  • Rest 60 to 90 seconds between sets
  • Walk daily — this matters more than you think

The progression rule. When you can hit the top of the rep range with clean form on every set, level up: add reps, slow the tempo (3 seconds down, 1 second up), or move to a harder variation. Never add multiple progressions at once.

For Omar

His program

Goal: lose the belly, get genuinely toned, build real strength.

174
cm
80
kg
per week
25′
per session
Training Log
0
This week
0
Week streak
0
Total sessions

Tap "Omar" above to enable tracking

A Workout One
  • Bodyweight squats3 × 12–15
    How to do it
    Feet shoulder-width apart, sit your hips back like lowering into a chair, then drive through your heels to stand tall.
  • Push-ups full, from toes — leave 2 in the tank3 × AMRAP–2
    How to do it
    Hands slightly wider than shoulders, body straight, lower chest slowly then push the floor away.
  • Pike push-ups feet on couch, hips piked2 × 6–10
    How to do it
    Hips high in a pike position, lower the top of your head toward the floor to target the shoulders.
  • Glute bridges3 × 15
    How to do it
    Lie on your back, feet planted, squeeze glutes and lift hips until your body forms a straight line.
  • Hollow body hold3 × 20–30s
    How to do it
    Press your lower back into the floor while holding shoulders and legs slightly elevated.
  • Side plank2 × 20–30s/side
    How to do it
    Support yourself on one forearm with hips lifted and body in one straight line.
B Workout Two
  • Reverse lunges3 × 10/leg
    How to do it
    Step backward, lower both knees with control, then push through the front foot to return.
  • Table rows under sturdy table, pull chest up3 × AMRAP
    How to do it
    Grip the edge of a sturdy table, keep body straight, pull chest toward the table.
  • Push-ups3 × AMRAP–2
    How to do it
    Hands slightly wider than shoulders, body straight, lower chest slowly then push the floor away.
  • Single-leg glute bridge3 × 8/leg
    How to do it
    One foot planted, one leg lifted, drive hips upward while squeezing the glute.
  • Dead bug slow & controlled3 × 8/side
    How to do it
    Keep your lower back pressed down while extending opposite arm and leg slowly.
  • Forearm plank2 × 30–45s
    How to do it
    Elbows under shoulders, core tight, glutes engaged, maintain a flat back.

The variation ladders

Where you're headed, in order. Don't skip rungs.

Push-up
standard diamond archer one-arm progressions
Squat
bodyweight split Bulgarian split pistol progressions
Row / Pull
table row feet-elevated archer pull-up weighted
Core
hollow hold hollow rocks toes-to-bar dragon flag
Vertical Push
pike push-up elevated pike wall handstand HSPU

When to add the pull-up bar. After 6–8 weeks of real consistency. Then add to Workout B: negative pull-ups (3 × 3–5, lower for 5 seconds), progressing to full reps, then weighted with a cheap dip belt.

Daily walking is non-negotiable. Target 7–8k steps a day, including one 20–30 minute brisk walk. This single habit does more for visceral fat than the entire workout program.

For Nadine

Her program

Goal: real-life strength, calm endurance, the body that travels well.

168
cm
49
kg
per week
22′
per session
Training Log
0
This week
0
Week streak
0
Total sessions

Tap "Nadine" above to enable tracking

An honest note. Recovery from malnutrition leaves muscle and connective tissue thinner than baseline for a while. Progress slowly. Don't push through joint pain. Strength gains will feel slow for the first 2–3 months, then normalize. This is expected and entirely normal.

A Workout One
  • Sit-to-stand from a chair3 × 8–12
    How to do it
    Stand up from a seated position without using momentum, then lower slowly.
  • Incline push-ups hands on counter or wall3 × 6–10
    How to do it
    Stand an arm’s length from the counter or wall, hands just wider than shoulders. Keep your body in one straight line as you lower your chest toward the surface, then press away without letting your hips sag.
  • Glute bridges3 × 12
    How to do it
    Lie on your back, feet planted, squeeze glutes and lift hips until your body forms a straight line.
  • Bird dog2 × 8/side
    How to do it
    Start on hands and knees with your spine neutral. Slowly extend one arm forward and the opposite leg backward without shifting your hips, then return with control and switch sides.
  • Dead bug2 × 6/side
    How to do it
    Keep your lower back pressed down while extending opposite arm and leg slowly.
B Workout Two
  • Step-ups on a stair3 × 8/leg
    How to do it
    Place one foot fully on the stair, lean slightly forward, and drive through that leg to stand up. Lower yourself slowly instead of dropping back down, keeping balance the entire time.
  • Knee push-ups or stay at incline3 × 5–8
    How to do it
    Start in a straight line from knees to shoulders, hands under or slightly outside shoulder width. Lower your chest with control, elbows angled back about 45 degrees, then push the floor away.
  • Hip hinge / good morning3 × 10
    How to do it
    Keep a soft bend in the knees and push your hips backward like closing a car door with them. Stop when you feel tension in the hamstrings, then drive hips forward to stand tall again.
  • Side-lying leg raises3 × 10/side
    How to do it
    Lie on your side with legs stacked and core tight. Lift the top leg slowly without rolling your hips backward, pause briefly at the top, then lower under control.
  • Plank from knees2 × 15–25s
    How to do it
    Rest on forearms and knees with elbows directly under shoulders. Brace your stomach gently, squeeze glutes lightly, and keep your torso straight instead of arching your lower back.

Her ladder

Push-up
wall counter kitchen table couch knee full
Squat
assisted sit-to-stand bodyweight split Bulgarian split
Plank
knee plank full plank longer holds

Walking is the real endurance builder. For the "not exhausted twenty minutes out of the house" goal, daily walking matters more than the strength workouts. Start with 20–30 minutes daily, gradually increase the pace, build to a 60–90 minute weekend walk or hike. Within 2–3 months you'll comfortably do a full day of city walking on a trip.

The Other 80%

What you eat

Diet does most of the work. Exercise burns trivial calories compared to food intake. Read this section twice.

For Omar — Fat loss without losing muscle

  • Mild calorie deficit: 250–400 kcal/day below maintenance
  • Protein target: 1.6–2.0 g/kg = roughly 130–160 g/day
  • The rule: protein at every single meal
  • Best sources: eggs, Greek yogurt, chicken, fish, legumes, cottage cheese
  • The belly will visibly change in 8–12 weeks with diet plus core work combined

For Nadine — Build, don't cut

  • No deficit. Underweight for height, still recovering.
  • Maintenance calories with adequate intake
  • Protein: 1.2–1.5 g/kg = roughly 60–75 g/day
  • Iron-rich foods: red meat, liver, lentils, spinach (with vitamin C for absorption)
  • Goal: gain 2–3 kg of lean mass over the next year — exactly what her frame needs

Sleep affects everything. Erratic timing hurts recovery and fat loss more than total hours. The single best lever is anchoring a fixed wake time — not sleep time. Everything else stabilizes within a few weeks. If you can't fix it, the program still works — just 10–20% slower.

The Long View

Where this leads

A year from now you'll laugh at where you started. Two years from now you'll have the body you described wanting.

Months 1–3 · Build the habit

Just show up

Don't change the program. Show up three times a week. Walk daily. By the end: Omar at 25+ clean push-ups with a visibly flatter belly, Nadine moving from knee push-ups toward full ones.

Months 3–6 · Add equipment

Things get more interesting

Pull-up bar arrives. Harder progressions enter the rotation — Bulgarian split squats, archer push-ups, hollow rocks. Sessions feel more like training and less like maintenance.

Months 6–12 · Real strength

The strength shows

Omar: working toward one-arm push-up progressions, weighted pull-ups, pistol squats. Nadine: full push-ups, real plank holds, the travel endurance you both wanted, achieved.

Year 2 and beyond · The fun stuff

Where calisthenics gets beautiful

Front lever progressions. Planche progressions. Handstand work. The physique you described wanting. But that's a problem for future-you.

· · ·
The Reasoning

Why this works

Read this once, then never again. It's here so you trust the plan when motivation thins.

Why calisthenics bodies look "right"

Every kilogram of mass is mass you must move through space. This creates relentless selection pressure toward an optimal strength-to-weight ratio — which maps almost exactly onto what humans evolved to find aesthetically appealing. The classical Greek statue look isn't a coincidence; ancient athletes were essentially calisthenics athletes.

Lengthened-range training

Calisthenics trains primarily in lengthened ranges of motion under load — deep dips, full pull-ups, full-depth push-ups, dragon flags. Recent hypertrophy research shows this preferentially grows muscle along its full length, producing the long muscle bellies that look aesthetic — versus shorter-range machine work which produces stubbier development.

Stabilizer recruitment

A push-up, ring dip, or planche fires dozens of supporting muscles to keep you from collapsing. Machines bypass nearly all of that. The result is integrated, layered development versus prime-mover-only development that can look weirdly disconnected.

Why your belly bulges (even though you're not fat)

Mostly a postural problem, not a fat problem. The bulge comes from a weak transverse abdominis — the deep corset-like muscle that holds your viscera in. Crunches don't train it. Dead bugs, hollow body holds, and planks do. Combine that with mild fat loss from diet, and the bulge resolves in 6–10 weeks.

Sundays, Two Minutes

Weekly check-in

Most people skip this. Don't. It's the single highest-leverage thing in the document.

Week of
Workouts done
MTW TFSS
Daily walks (7–8k steps)/ 7
Fixed wake time hit/ 7
Protein target hit/ 7

Reflection

Best workout
What felt hardest
Progression earned

Body check  every 2 weeks

Weight (kg)
Waist at navel (cm)
Max push-ups
Plank hold (sec)
One thing to focus on next week

Show up three days. Walk every day. Eat enough protein.
Don't skip more than one session in a row.

Everything else is detail · The program works if you do it

Built with intention, discipline, and a little obsession.