Lee Matulis · Lazy Fit
Public training log · ongoing since July 2024

~60 minutes
a week. Year after year.

I get told, constantly, that an hour a week isn't enough to look or move like this. It holds anyway. The honest claim isn't huge gains — it's that staying strong and fit costs laughably little. Arguably less than the quiet drain of staying out of shape. Here's every session, in full.

Now

Latest session


01

The method

The shape of it

  • ~2.1 sessions a week — averaged across 2024–2026.
  • More than half of sessions are one high-intensity exercise.
  • Low reps: 12 per set is the ceiling (except kettlebell swings).
  • ~1 min per set, 2–3 min rest, 3–5 sets per exercise.
  • 15–20 min for one exercise. No gym, no commute, no time wasted.

The equipment

Home only: three kettlebells (16, 24, 32 kg) and a set of parallettes — plus public pull-up bars. That's it. An architect, not a bodybuilder.

Working toward the Convict Conditioning apex movements — handstand push-ups, one-arm push-ups, pistol squats, pull-ups — adding a rational layer on top of intuitive training.

+ What gets logged — and what doesn't

Logged

  • Every workout with at least 3 full working sets per exercise (5 is the gold standard).
  • Minor notes on injuries, fasting, supplements.

Not logged

  • Short spontaneous efforts — a quick pull-up stop, a kettlebell flow — done “in between things”.
  • Everyday movement: walking, biking, dancing. Enjoyable, but not a driver of gains.

Selfies are interspersed as visual proof of what this delivers over time. The log is the real thing — not a recommendation. Use common sense, consult your doctor, experiment responsibly.


02

The proof

Filter the whole log by movement. Progression shown where it's meaningful — kept honest.


03

The log

Every session, newest first. Filtered to match your selection above.

[20; +3] = session workload (total reps) and its change since the last session of that movement — now computed for every entry. 24 kg added load · kg·reps = load × reps