The Complete Path to Lifelong Martial Strength

THE IRON BODY PROGRESSION MAP

The Complete Path to Lifelong Martial Strength


The Iron Body Is Not Built All At Once

It Is Built In Layers

There comes a moment in every serious martial artist’s life where something doesn’t quite add up anymore.

It doesn’t happen during training. In fact, during training, everything can feel fine. You’re moving, you’re sweating, you’re working. But afterward… when you sit down, when your body settles, that’s when you start to notice it.

Your understanding is deeper than it’s ever been. Your timing is better. Your awareness is sharper. You see things now that you never saw before.

And yet your body doesn’t respond the way it used to.

Your strikes require more effort. Your structure doesn’t feel as stable under pressure. Recovery takes longer than it should. And the most frustrating part is this—you’re still training. Maybe harder than ever.

So what’s the problem?

The truth is, you’re not losing skill.

You’re losing your ability to express it.

Your mind still understands exactly what to do, but your body no longer has the capacity to carry it out the way it once did. And this has nothing to do with age, effort, or discipline.

It has everything to do with how you’ve been training.


The Real Problem Is Fragmentation

Most martial artists train in pieces.

They build a little strength here, add some conditioning there, work their techniques, maybe sprinkle in mobility or flexibility work. On the surface, it looks complete. It feels like they’re covering all the bases.

But they’re not.

They’re training parts of the body… instead of training the body as a system.

Over time, this creates a kind of internal disconnect. Strength develops without structure. Durability improves without elasticity. Breath is trained, but never fully integrated into movement. And slowly, almost invisibly, the body starts to lose its cohesion.

Power begins to leak. Movement becomes stiff. Effort increases where it used to be effortless.

Because the body doesn’t function in isolated pieces. It functions as an interconnected whole.

This is what the old masters understood—deeply, physically, not just intellectually. They weren’t chasing strength or conditioning as separate qualities. They were developing the body itself. They were building a system.

That’s the idea behind the Iron Body.

And it’s the reason the Iron Body Progression Map exists.


A Map That Shows You What To Do Next

Most people don’t need more information.

They need direction.

They need to know where they are, what they’re missing, and what comes next.

The Iron Body Progression Map gives you that.

It’s not just a concept. It’s a structure you can follow. A way to rebuild your body layer by layer, so that everything begins to work together again instead of fighting against itself.

You can think of it as a ladder. Each step supports the one above it. Skip a step, and everything becomes unstable. Follow it in order, and something powerful begins to happen—the body starts to reconnect.


Foundation: Where Everything Begins

At the base of the system is daily practice. This is the Iron Body Daily Eight.

This is where most people go wrong, because it doesn’t look impressive. It’s not intense. It doesn’t leave you exhausted. But that’s exactly why it works.

This layer teaches you how to hold your body correctly. It develops alignment, awareness, and a kind of quiet control over your nervous system. Your posture improves. Your breathing begins to settle. You start to feel your body as a connected whole rather than a collection of parts.

Without this layer, everything else you do sits on unstable ground. No matter how strong or skilled you become, something always feels off. But once this foundation is in place, everything above it has something solid to build on.

👉 If you don’t already have a structured daily practice, this is exactly what the Iron Body Daily Eight Mini-Course was designed to give you—a simple, guided starting point you can implement immediately.


Structure: Building the Frame

Once the foundation is established, the next step is structure.

This is where practices like Zhan Zhuang and isometric training come in. Now you’re no longer just aware of your body—you’re organizing it. You’re learning how to stack the skeleton, how to root into the ground, and how to create clear pathways for force to travel through your body.

This changes everything.

Instead of feeling loose or disconnected, you begin to feel supported. Stable. Grounded. Your body starts to behave like a unified structure rather than a series of moving parts.

Most people try to generate power before they build structure. That’s why their power never holds up under pressure. Because without structure, force has nowhere to go. It collapses.

Structure is what allows power to exist in the first place.

👉 This is why foundational isometric work and standing training are emphasized so heavily inside the system—they’re not “extra work”… they are the work.


Durability: Strengthening the Tissue

With structure in place, the next layer is durability.

Now you begin strengthening the actual material of the body—the tendons, fascia, connective tissue, and even the bones. This is where Martial Qigong comes in.

At this stage, the body starts to feel different. Joints that used to ache begin to settle down. The constant sense of wear and tear starts to fade. You don’t just feel strong—you feel resilient.

There’s a density to your body now. A kind of quiet toughness that doesn’t rely on tension.

This is what allows you to train consistently over time without breaking down. It’s what separates someone who trains hard for a few years from someone who can train for decades.

👉 This is the layer most modern training completely ignores—which is exactly why systems like Martial Qigong become so important as you progress.


Elasticity: The True Source of Power

Once the body is structured and durable, something new becomes possible.

Now you can develop elasticity.

This is where real martial power begins to emerge.

Through methods like Yi Jin Jing and the Iron Silk Method, you train the tendons to behave like springs. Instead of forcing movement with muscular effort, you begin to store and release energy naturally.

This is where things start to feel almost surprising.

Strikes become heavier, but require less effort. Movement becomes lighter, but more effective. The body begins to generate power without you having to consciously push for it.

This is the difference between forcing power and having power.

👉 This is where the Iron Silk Method fits into the system—developing the kind of spring-like power most martial artists never access.


Pressure: The Hidden Amplifier

At this point, everything is in place—but it still needs to be connected internally.

That’s where breath comes in.

Breath is what ties the entire system together. It creates internal pressure. It stabilizes the body from the inside out. It allows force to move through the body in a way that is controlled, efficient, and calm.

Without breath, everything remains mechanical.

With breath, everything becomes alive.

You’re no longer just moving your body—you’re driving it from within.


Integration: The Martial Body

The final layer is integration.

This is where everything you’ve built is tested and expressed through real movement—carries, crawls, loaded patterns, and martial application.

This is where strength becomes usable. Where structure becomes dynamic. Where power becomes something you can apply under pressure without thinking about it.

This is what it means to have a martial body.

Not just strength. Not just technique.

But a body that can express both—effortlessly.


Why This Changes Everything

Once you understand this map, your entire approach to training shifts.

You stop asking random questions like, “What workout should I do today?”

And you start asking a much more important question:

“What layer am I missing?”

That question gives you direction. It removes confusion. It allows you to train with purpose instead of guessing.

And more importantly, it prevents you from wasting years developing one quality while neglecting the others.


Where Are You Right Now?

If you’re honest with yourself, you already know where you are.

Maybe you’re just starting and need to build a foundation. Maybe you’re strong, but unstable. Maybe your body feels worn down and needs durability. Or maybe you’re chasing power, but haven’t yet developed the elasticity that makes it effortless.

Where you are determines what you should train next.


The Final Truth

You don’t need more intensity.

You don’t need more random training.

You don’t need to push harder.

You need to train the right layer, at the right time, in the right order.

That is how the Iron Body is built.


Start Here

If you want to begin the process the right way, start with the foundation.

The Iron Body Daily Eight is where everything begins. It’s simple, but it’s not easy. It requires attention, consistency, and patience. But if you commit to it, it will change the way your body feels, moves, and performs.

From there, you build upward—structure, durability, elasticity, pressure, and finally integration.

And over time, something shifts.

You don’t just feel stronger.

You feel connected. Stable. Powerful.

Like your body is finally working the way it was meant to.

👉 The Iron Body Daily Eight is the entry point into this entire system.

– -Jon Haas, The Warrior Coach

Which Program is Best for YOU?

I get asked this question all the time – Jon, which one of your programs should I start with?

And the answer is, it depends on your goals. So in this article I’m going to give you a set of general guidelines to help you decide which program is right for you.

Quick disclaimer before we get started: ALL of my programs are designed to increase functional strength, improve mobility/flexibility, and build your health and energy reserves. Even though my training is forged in the crucible of martial arts, you do NOT need to be a martial artist to reap all the benefits from any of my programs.

 So here goes…

 If you are a martial artist looking to unlock the methods of internal power which make ANY art powerful and useful than I recommend starting with Integrated Strength, Shadow Strength, or The Power Protocol. Each one of these looks at the secrets of internal power and strength from a slightly different perspective to guide you into becoming an all around power house in your respective art.

 If you are a weekend warrior looking for the edge in your strength and conditioning training, I suggest the WarFit Program or Sledgehammer Domination which are designed to build superior levels of functional strength, burn fat, and increase all around endurance.

If you are looking to build up your energy reserves and recover faster from all your training and life stress, I suggest Evolve Your Breathing or Vital Force. Both these programs will balance out your workouts and help build health, energy, and give you the edge in your recovery.

And lastly, if you are a man in the over 40 crowd, I highly recommend Strong(er) Over 40 and Dad Strength. These programs will guide you to growing stronger as you get older, along with building and keeping your levels of testosterone high!

At any age and in any life circumstance, keep training, keep pushing, keep growing, and always keep challenging your perceived limits!

If you want all the best that Warrior Fitness has to offer brought to you each and every month, then I highly recommend signing up for the Warrior’s Inner Circle. Here is where you get my most up to date training information plus 4 free stand alone programs!!

Be Dangerous to be Kind

Inside the heart of every man lives a warrior waiting to be unleashed. Unfortunately, this fierceness, for the majority of men, lies dormant and untested. But, I assure you, it is there.

As boys we pretended to be superheroes, Jedi knights, or ninja warriors.  I know I did all 3 with matching costumes, capes, and weapons to boot. In fact, I distinctly remember when I was 6 or 7 leaping off the back deck of my parent’s house in New Hampshire fully garbed in Superman Underoos (on the outside of my clothes, of course!) and cape fully expecting to fly.

We ran wild, climbed trees, built forts, engaged in mock sword battles, and real fist fights as boys – not to test our mettle, but really just as an open and honest expression of our warrior nature.

As we grew up though, things changed. We grew tame (lame?). The wildness was repressed and replaced under the well meaning familial and societal pressure of becoming a responsible adult. We went to school, got a job working for the man, and become domesticated.

We shed our capes in favor of business suits.

We took off our Lone Ranger masks and put on listless, polite faces.

We put down our pretend weapons and picked up pocket protectors.

We suppressed the wildness and ferocity of the warrior in our hearts and tried to follow the expected path – college, corporate job, marriage, family, retirement, death.  One more masculine casualty – a would be warrior turned tame and toothless, a tiger no more, really just an aging house cat.

But is that really all there is?

Doesn’t the wildness remain?

Yes. I assure you it most certainly does. For as I stated earlier, inside the heart of a man – every man, no matter who you are – lies a warrior.

Being a warrior is not confined to myths and legends or historical anachronisms. Nor is it merely the province of those in uniform who stand on the front lines and protect us with their own (though they truly embody the warrior spirit).

No, warriorship, at its essence is the birthright of every man. For all of us are made with a warrior’s heart, strong and dangerous.

Yes, dangerous.  The most dangerous men I have ever met have also been among the kindest and friendliest. Is this a contradiction? No, not at all. Only the truly powerful can choose to be truly gentle. Those who lack strength and courage have no choice.

A warrior must have the strength, skill, and ability to wield violence. Notice that I did not say, “be a violent man”. There is a vast difference. The warrior’s capacity for violence is tempered by discipline, a sense of justice, and a strong moral code.

Moreover, the warrior’s role in society is that of a protector and defender of life. His strength must never be used to intimidate, but only to motivate, to inspire, and to protect.

Méthode Naturelle creator Georges Hébert wrote at the beginning of the 20th century, “Être fort pour être utile” – Be strong to be useful

Those of us who walk this path of strength have a duty to use our strength to help others and to defend and protect those who are not as strong.

As Spiderman once said – “With great power come great responsibility.” 🙂

Strength must have a higher purpose.

The Warrior’s Creed

This might be my own personal bias, but I believe a warrior has a greater responsibility, one of both self and others.  My perception has been colored, for the better, I think, by my teacher, Jack Hoban, author of The Ethical Warrior: Values, Morals and Ethics – For Life, Work and Service, and his mentor, Dr. Robert L. Humphrey.

These 2 men are both true warriors whom I admire greatly.  Jack served as a U.S. Marine Corps officer and is a master level instructor in the Bujinkan martial arts.  Dr. Humphrey was a boxer and Marine Corps officer who survived the battle of Iwo Jima in World War II.

There is much, much more to both of their stories, but for now, we can sum up the essence of what it means to be a warrior like so:

 

 

“The Warrior Creed”

Wherever I go,
Everyone is a little bit safer because I am there.
Wherever I am,
Anyone in need has a friend.
When I return home,
Everyone is happy I am there.
It’s a better life! 

-Dr. Robert L. Humphrey

 

Everyone who calls themselves a warrior believes that they should possess greater strength, greater power, and greater skill; should they not also possess greater compassion for others and a greater sense of responsibility for helping others as well?

 

For those who have the strength and the skill, but no accountability, they cannot be called warriors – they are merely thugs.

 

Ready to Upgrade Your Power? Click HERE now.

Leave A Legacy of Strength

This is for all the Dads out there.

Our kids depend on us for all sorts of basic survival needs – food, clothing, shelter, etc.  But what about one of their most critical survival needs?  The need to grow up with a role model who will teach them through example. Continue reading

Do You Still Have Dad Strength?

Remember back when you were a little kid and your father always looked like this physically imposing, towering figure of a man?  You had this perception of your dad as a super-human figure who could pick you up over his head and put you on his strong shoulders to be able to see the world.  Standing on the shoulders of giants, indeed. Continue reading