The Four Phases of Jedi Training

Luke Skywalker was already well-advanced on the path to Jedidom when the series started, since he'd spent the last umpteen years on a sand ranch. Most modern Padawans must start their programs a little earlier. This page represents my personal training goals; if you want to train, work up your own set.

Phase I will be complete when I can:

  • Perform Jedi mind control on small animals.
  • Stand on my hands against a wall for 10 minutes.
  • Bench 125 pounds.
  • Squat 150 pounds.
  • Do three pullups.
  • Do the kind of situp which involves sitting on a reclining bench--easily.
  • Run two miles.

Phase II will be complete when I can:

  • Herd farm animals, wrangle robots, and do all other things necessary for the running of a postmodern sand ranch.
  • Perform Jedi mind control on large animals.
  • Light a lightsaber.
  • Levitate small objects with the power of my mind.
  • Stand on my hands in the middle of the room for 10 minutes.
  • Bench 145 pounds.
  • Squat 175 pounds.
  • Do fifteen behind-the-neck pullups.
  • Do the kind of situp which involves hanging from a bar.
  • Run eight miles.

Phase III will be complete when I can:

  • Levitate a small starship with the power of my mind. (This accomplishment makes the rest of my weight-training pointless, but the true test of a Jedi is whether she looks good in a big brown bathrobe.)
  • Stand on one hand in the middle of a swamp for 10 minutes.
  • Perform Jedi mind control on sentients.
  • Bench 165 pounds.
  • Squat 200 pounds.
  • Do great masses of pullups.
  • Do the kind of situp which involves hanging from a bar--easily.
  • Run eight miles regularly and easily.

Phase IV will be complete when I can:

  • Kill my own father in pitched combat on a bridge inside the Death Star. (Note to self: Must enroll father in Jedi training early so that he will have become a nigh-unstoppable force of evil by the time I am ready to complete Phase IV. He is probably ready to start training in Phase II, and favorite glowing neon yellow T-shirt indicates that he is ripe for the Dark Side, but currently the pitched battle would go something like, "Hey, Dad! Look at that cool thingy way down there!" *kick* Must also find out whether electrical engineers are capable of becoming Jedis. If not, may have to change this requirement to "Kill my own mother in pitched combat on a bridge inside the Death Star." Mom is an elementary-school nurse lady and is therefore capable of anything.)
  • Drive through central Boston with my eyes closed.
  • Perform Jedi mind control on my mother.
  • Bench 185 pounds.
  • Squat 225 pounds.
  • See my abs.
  • Run a less-prestigious marathon.
  • Shag Han Solo.

I'm still getting a feel for the relative difficulty of these tasks, so all of these checkpoints are subject to change with experience. As a comparison, according to the British All Comers' Powerlifting Records the records for women in my weight class are 295 pounds for the bench press and 466 pounds for the squat.

I can currently:

  • Levitate birds.
  • Perform Jedi mind control on plants.
  • Stand on my hands against a wall for a couple of minutes.
  • Bench 70 pounds easily, 85 with more difficulty; after that my arms wobble and I start to fear killing myself with the bar. Must find a spotter so I can learn what my max is.
  • Squat 110 pounds, although this was giving me back trouble. Again: Must find a spotter so I can learn my max.
  • Do most of one pullup if my arms are fresh and I kick.
  • Do a set of 50 crunches on the machine at the gym without dying, although any attempt to do this at home causes severe back pain around crunch 10. I can also do about ten reclining situps before my back starts making ominous noises.
  • Run a quarter of a mile easily; I haven't run a whole mile except on a machine. I can walk four miles without being more than flagged and a little cranky.

I can also bend over, place my palms flat on the ground, and bend my arms, which is why flexibility training isn't on the list.

Weight loss is a personal goal of mine, but since my weight affects my Jedi training only in matters of pullups, running, and how good I look in a big brown bathrobe, I am not setting weight requirements for each training phase.

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