Gee, it's just grand to be publicly acknowledged in front of 10,000 Cathe-ites to be the complete Pushup Weenie that I am.
I'm late catching up on this thread, and the thought clearly occurs to me after reading everybody's posts that long arms and legs seem NOT to be the common denominator. What I now suspect is this (and I have zero training, mind you, this is pure Educated Crowd conjecture): The key to big boy pushups is mondo core strength, and if you have less than that AND you have long arms, you've got TWO problems -- lack of stellar core support plus long-lever interference from your arms. And then, I would think, if you add to that the THIRD problem of long legs, then you've got the Trifecta of pushup-defeating challenges.
And that, my dear ladies, would be me. Long arms, long legs, and mediocre core strength, if I gauge that by how well I keep up with Cathe on the more advanced core work.
I'm good at oblique work of any kind, and I can do stationary planks all day but not those damnable walking "soldier" planks. (A really pitiful sight I often topple over, I am not kidding.)
Y'all know those stability ball things in PUB where you lie prone and lift the ball over your head while curling up and then tap the ball with each leg, roll back and then immediately come halfway back up for what Cathe (from somewhere on planet Mars, apparently) calls "a partial recovery"? Sheer torture at that tempo. After months of practice I can do the whole set now on a strong day, but I am at absolute failure by the last rep and couldn't do a single one more.
And although I have improved, pikes are still brutal to me. In PUB's core section, I am exhausted by the legs-tap-the-ball thingys by the time pikes roll around, and I just dread them. I can manage about four or five with great form, two more with pathetically sinking butt height (and a lot of tension in my hip flexors, by the way -- what's that all about????) and then I have to finish with knees-in instead of pikes. Then when Cathe and crew are "resting" by holding nice and stable on the ball and lifting first one leg and then the other before Cathe cheerfully says "Let's do a few more inverteds," like that would be just SO easy -- well, I'm usually sitting back on my heels having a moment of air-sucking red-faced recovery. But I am nothing if not stubborn. After a minute I make myself rewind the DVD a little, I get back up on the ball and I restart the DVD where they begin those alternate leg-lifts during the "resting phase" before the rest of the pikes. I try to do those bleepin' alternate leg lifts with them but half the time, again, I fall off the ball, then I struggle through "a few more inverteds." I am like jello at the end of this.
Now, I tell you kind people all this NOT so you can chortle at me (go ahead, though -- my kids do it all the time

), but to support my brilliant theory of why pushups elude me, and us. I can't do a thing about my orangutan arms or Abe Lincoln legs, but I can add another core workout or two to my schedule every week. Which I should have been doing all along, of course, but it's so excruciating it's like "eat your vegetables", ya know? Ugh.
I pledge to try that for a month and report back to see if my pushup count has improved.
So, whaddaya think, Educated Crowd of Pushup Weenies? Do you think we all must confess to a core issue??? ;-)
http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/sport/sport-smiley-003.gif Kathy S.
http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/spezial/spudniks/spudniklifter.gif
Weenie Queen