Pull

Movement Pattern · PLL

Pull Training:
The Pattern That Changes Everything

Pull movements are where calisthenics separates from the gym. The pull-up is the most honest test of relative strength there is — your bodyweight, your grip, nothing else. This is the full pull pattern library, from first hang to one-arm progressions.


What Is a Pull Movement?

A pull movement is any exercise where you move load or your own bodyweight toward your body through arm flexion. In calisthenics, that means hanging from a bar, rings, or any overhead structure — and pulling your bodyweight up to meet your hands.

Pull patterns divide into vertical pull (pull-ups, chin-ups — pulling from overhead) and horizontal pull (rows — pulling parallel to the ground). Both matter. Most people only train vertical. That’s a mistake — rows develop the mid-back and rear deltoids that vertical pulls don’t fully reach, and they’re essential for shoulder health in any serious push program.

Primary movers are your lats (latissimus dorsi), biceps, and rear deltoids. Rhomboids and mid-traps do the scapular work. A well-trained pull pattern is one of the clearest physical signals of real relative strength — and one of the most visible.

Masters Note: Elbow tendinopathy — both medial and lateral — is the most common injury for adults returning to pull training after a long break. It doesn’t announce itself loudly at first. It builds quietly over weeks of too much volume too fast, then sidelines you for months. The fix is preventive: build your dead hang time before your pull-up volume. Four weeks of hanging — dead hangs, scapular pull-ups, rows only — conditions the connective tissue that your muscles will outpace if you skip ahead. Your tendons are slower to adapt than your muscles. Respect that gap.


Pull Progressions: T1 → T5

Pull progressions are uniquely demanding because most people come in with almost no pulling history. The jump from dead hang to first pull-up is the most commonly underestimated gap in calisthenics. The tier system bridges it — if you actually use every step.

T1 — Joint Prep

Build the hang

Dead hangs, scapular retractions, shoulder circles. Grip and connective tissue conditioning before load.

T2 — Load Introduction

First pulling load

Vertical rows, incline rows, band-assisted pull-ups. Learning the movement pattern with manageable resistance.

T3 — Skill Development

The pull-up

Full pull-ups, chin-ups, neutral grip, wide grip. Building volume and consistency in the foundational movement.

T4 — Strength

Advanced load

Weighted pull-ups, L-sit pull-ups, ring pull-ups, typewriter pull-ups. Adding complexity and external load.

T5 — Mastery

One-arm work

One-arm negatives, archer pull-ups, muscle-up progressions. The long game. Patience required.


Every Pull Exercise, Tiered

Exercise Tier Primary focus
Dead hangT1Grip strength, shoulder decompression
Scapular pull-upsT1Lat activation, scapular control
Vertical rows (table rows)T2Horizontal pull, bodyweight fraction
Incline rowsT2Progressive horizontal pull
Band-assisted pull-upsT2Vertical pull pattern, reduced load
Negative pull-upsT2Eccentric strength, vertical pattern
Chin-upsT3Supinated grip, bicep emphasis
Pull-upsT3Pronated grip, lat emphasis
Neutral grip pull-upsT3Elbow-friendly, balanced load
Wide grip pull-upsT3Lat width, reduced bicep involvement
Typewriter pull-upsT4Lateral control, unilateral prep
L-sit pull-upsT4Core integration, hip flexor demand
Ring pull-upsT4Unstable surface, stabilizer demand
Weighted pull-upsT4Max strength development
Archer pull-upsT5Unilateral load introduction
One-arm negativesT5One-arm pull-up prep
Muscle-up (bar)T5Pull-to-push transition

How to Train the Pull Pattern

Frequency: 2–3 pull sessions per week. Pull movements stress the elbow flexors and connective tissue heavily — elbow tendinopathy is the most common overuse injury in people who ramp pull volume too fast. Build slow.

Grease the groove: Pull strength responds exceptionally well to low-rep, high-frequency practice. If you have a bar at home, doing 2–3 pull-ups every time you walk past it — without going to failure — builds volume and neural efficiency faster than one weekly max-effort session.

The first pull-up: Most adults who have never done a pull-up need 6–12 weeks of T1 and T2 work before attempting a full rep. That’s dead hangs, scapular pull-ups, rows, and negatives — consistently, every week. The pull-up doesn’t arrive without that foundation. With it, it shows up on a specific, identifiable day.

Balance with push: Match pull sessions with push sessions across the week. The ratio that protects shoulder health long-term is roughly equal push and pull volume — or slightly more pull. If your shoulders ache during push movements, add more rowing before adding more push exercises.


Ready to find your place in the pull progression? The Progression Map shows where you are across all ten movement patterns — and what comes next.

View the Progression Map →