The answer to why are dips so hard but push ups are easy is simple physics: a push-up has you lifting about 70% of your bodyweight, while a dip forces you to lift over 95%. You're not weak; you're trying to lift significantly more weight without realizing it. It’s a frustrating feeling. You’ve been consistent with push-ups, maybe you can knock out 20, 30, or even 50 reps. You feel strong. Then you get on a dip station, lower yourself down, and can't push back up. It feels like hitting a brick wall, and it makes you question all the progress you thought you made.
Let's break down the math. If you weigh 180 pounds:
That’s a 45-pound jump in resistance. You’re not failing at dips because you’re bad at them; you’re failing because you’re trying to add 45 pounds to your press overnight. No one would walk into a gym, bench press 126 pounds, and then immediately try to bench 171 pounds on the next set. Yet, that's exactly what you're asking your body to do when you switch from push-ups to dips. The floor in a push-up provides support for your lower body, effectively removing about 30% of the load. In a dip, your entire torso and legs are dead weight hanging below you, and you have to lift almost all of it. This is the primary reason dips feel impossible while push-ups feel manageable.
Beyond the raw weight difference, dips are harder because they demand a level of stability and muscle activation that push-ups simply don't. A push-up is a closed-chain, horizontal press. Your hands and feet are fixed to the floor, creating a stable, predictable environment. Dips are an open-chain, vertical press. Your body is suspended in the air, and you alone are responsible for creating stability.
This exposes three key weaknesses that push-ups hide:
You now understand the physics and the muscle mechanics. Dips are harder because they're heavier and require more stability. But knowing this doesn't get you your first rep. How do you bridge the 45-pound gap between your push-up strength and your dip strength? If you don't have a plan to systematically close that gap, you're just guessing.
Feeling strong in push-ups and weak in dips is normal. The goal isn't to do more push-ups; it's to build the specific strength and stability that dips demand. This 3-step protocol is designed to do exactly that. Follow it for 12 weeks, and you will be able to do multiple, full-range-of-motion dips.
For the first month, you won't do a single full dip. Instead, you'll focus on two exercises that build the specific strength you're missing. Do this twice a week.
Once you can hold yourself for 45+ seconds and control a 5-second negative, you're ready to start training the full movement with assistance. You have two options: resistance bands or an assisted dip machine.
After progressing through the bands or machine, you'll reach a point where you're using the thinnest band or minimal assistance. Now it's time to test your bodyweight dip. You should be able to perform at least 1-3 clean reps. From here, the goal is simple progressive overload.
Progressing on dips is not a linear path. It's a grind that requires patience. Understanding the timeline will keep you from quitting when it feels like you're not getting anywhere.
That's the plan: support holds, negatives, then banded reps, then bodyweight. You'll track your hold times, your negative descent seconds, the band color, and your reps for each set. That's at least 3 data points per workout, 2-3 times a week, for 12 weeks. Trying to remember if you did 4 negatives or 5 last Tuesday is how progress stalls.
Assisted dip machines are a good tool, but they aren't a perfect substitute for bands. They build strength in your chest and triceps but do less for shoulder stability because the machine moves on a fixed path. It's best to combine them with stability work like support holds.
To keep your shoulders safe, do not go too deep. Your shoulders should only go slightly below your elbows at the bottom. Keep your chest up and pull your shoulder blades back and down. If you feel a sharp, pinching pain in the front of your shoulder, stop immediately and reduce the range of motion.
For a chest-focused dip, lean your torso forward about 30 degrees and allow your elbows to flare out slightly. To target your triceps more, keep your torso as vertical as possible and your elbows tucked in tight to your sides throughout the movement.
While learning, you can practice the progressions (holds, negatives) 2-3 times per week. Once you can perform bodyweight reps, treat dips like any other major strength lift. Train them 1-2 times per week, allowing at least 48 hours of rest for recovery and muscle growth.
You can practice on two sturdy, identical-height chairs or kitchen countertops placed back-to-back. Ensure they are stable and won't slide apart. Start with support holds and negatives to test the setup's safety before attempting more dynamic movements like assisted or full reps.
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