A 64-year-old grandfathera> has set a record for the quickest time to complete 10,000 <a href="https: — while waiting for a medical-research.
Jack Gilchrist set about completing the Worldwide Kettlebell Challenge — to do 10,000 swings in a month — but found he was racing through them.
The fitness-crazed Englishman completed it in just 21 days, a feat he said experts told him is unheard of.
So now he’s set his sights on doing 100,000 of the super-strength swings in around 200 days.
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Each swing sees him hold a 56-pound metal bell in each hand, swinging them in a skiing motion while moving in and out of a semi squat.
His grueling fitness regimen comes despite waiting for a hip replacement for two years — pushed back by pandemic restrictions.
Gilchrist, of Chorley, world-regions, said: “People normally do 500 [swings] a day for 28 days, taking weekends off. The most I’ve ever done is 1,200 in a day. I’m 64 this year and the kettlebell swings only form a small part of my daily workout. I walked over 800 miles in the first lockdown last March.”
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“The 10,000-swing challenge is worldwide and has been going on for years,” he added. “It’s for all sorts of athletes across all ages. At the start of this last lockdown I thought ‘I’ll give that a go’. It was really hard, but such fun, and my immediate thought was ‘I reckon I could do that every day for a year.’”
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“When I first started, I was struggling to do sets of 10 and now I can do sets of 50 pretty easily,” he continued. “I look younger than I do in pictures of me in my 30s.”
Jack Gilchrist, from Chorley, Lancashire, U.K., completed the Worldwide Kettlebell Challenge in just 21 days.
(SWNS)
Gilchrist said he started his first 10,000-swing challenge on Nov. 9, 2020, and completed it a week early on Dec. 6.
The gym fanatic decided to keep going and aim for 100,000. He’s currently 81,430 swings into it and is due to finish in around a month, on June 6.
He’s had just 29 rest days since he started — mostly to allow his hands to recover.
“In the first month, my hands got ripped to pieces. It was hard, but my God, it was good fun. It’s a dynamic, powerful exercise where everything comes from your core. Your secondary muscles like arms come into it a bit.”
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“I don’t think I’m phenomenally good. There is just never a back door as far as I’m concerned. I feel that ‘life’s too short’ goes for everything — relationships, health, everything. I’ve had my bio markers measured, and I am physically in the condition of a 35- to 37-year-old man,” he said.
This story was originally published by SWNS.