Strength Workout
100 Push-Ups Challenge Workout
The 100 push-ups challenge broken into 10 sets of 10 reps with 30 seconds of rest between sets. Each set uses a different push-up variation to target your chest, shoulders, and triceps from multiple angles: standard, wide grip, diamond, staggered, and decline. All reps are tap-to-advance so you maintain quality over speed. The variation between sets keeps the workout interesting and develops well-rounded pushing strength rather than just endurance in one position. Approximately 15 minutes to complete. Intermediate difficulty — you should be able to do at least 15 consecutive standard push-ups before attempting this challenge.
Workout Breakdown
More Strength Workouts
Upper Body Warm Up Routine
A 5-minute warm-up designed for push day, bench press, overhead press, or any upper body training session. Progresses from small arm circles to large ones, adds shoulder rolls, then moves into band pull-aparts and wall push-ups to activate the pushing muscles at low intensity. Scapular push-ups specifically wake up your serratus anterior — a muscle critical for shoulder health during pressing movements. Arm swings and wrist circles round it out. The whole sequence takes your shoulders through their full range of motion and activates the stabilizers that protect your joints under load. Five minutes that can prevent months of shoulder problems.
Standing Core Workout No Floor Needed
A core workout you can do without ever touching the floor — perfect for the office, a small space, or anyone who can't get down on the ground. Standing crunches, standing bicycles, standing oblique crunches, wood chops, high knee pulls, and standing leg raises. All movements are performed upright, using gravity and body mechanics to challenge your core. Two complete circuits with brief rest between exercises. Ten minutes, beginner-friendly, and surprisingly effective — standing core work requires more balance and coordination than floor exercises, which activates additional stabilizer muscles. The no-floor constraint makes this the most accessible core workout in the library.
Six-Pack Ab Circuit
A circuit-style ab workout targeting the muscles visible in a six-pack. Three rounds of crunches, leg raises, bicycles, planks, and V-ups — rep-based exercises with tap-to-advance format so you control the tempo. The combination of flexion exercises (crunches, V-ups), anti-extension (plank), and rotation (bicycles) ensures all visible abdominal muscles are trained. Rest between rounds allows partial recovery so you can maintain form. Twelve minutes total. Intermediate difficulty — V-ups in particular require both core strength and hip flexor flexibility. Consistency matters more than intensity for visible abs — do this 3 times per week alongside a sensible diet.