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Article: How Monkee Grips Are Changing the Deadlift

How Monkee Grips Are Changing the Deadlift

The deadlift is one of the most respected lifts in strength training.

It builds the back, hips, and legs. It teaches you to move real weight. It’s simple and honest.

But here’s a question most lifters never ask:

Is your deadlift as strong as your body, or only as strong as your bar?

Most deadlifts are trained on a stiff steel handle with sharp knurling. That bar gives your hands a firm edge to grab. It helps you hold on even when your grip is not that strong.

That’s useful.
But it can also hide a weakness.

The Bar Helps You More Than You Think

A good barbell is designed to be grippy. The knurling bites into your hands. Chalk adds friction. Mixed grip and hook grip add more security.

All of this lets you lift more.

But it also means your hands don’t always have to work as hard as the rest of your body.

Your legs and back may be doing honest work, while your grip is getting assistance from the bar itself.

That’s not wrong. It’s just worth noticing.

Because the moment you lose that help, things change.

Change the Handle, Change the Lift

When you attach Monkee Grips to a bar or weights, the feel of the lift changes right away.

Now the handle is rope.

There’s no sharp knurling.
No hard edge to lock onto.
No passive support from the bar.

If your grip relaxes, even a little, the rope moves.

That forces your hands to stay active the whole time.

Suddenly, the deadlift is not just a back and leg exercise.
It becomes a full grip and pulling exercise.

Same movement pattern.
Different demand.

It Feels Humbling at First

Many strong lifters are surprised the first time they try rope grip deadlifts.

Weights that feel easy on a barbell can feel challenging with rope.

That’s not because rope is magic.
It’s because it removes some of the assistance your hands are used to.

It shows you what your grip can actually do on its own.

That can be humbling.
But it can also be useful.

Because now you know where you really stand.

Honest Strength Is Built on Honest Grip

If your goal is to build real, transferable strength, your grip matters.

Strong hands help with:
Deadlifts
Rows
Carries
Pull ups
Sports and manual work

When your grip gets stronger, your confidence under load grows too. The bar feels more secure. Heavy sets feel more under control.

You stop worrying about the bar slipping and start focusing on the lift.

A Simple Experiment

You don’t need to replace your normal deadlifts.

Just add rope grip deadlifts as a variation.

Lighter weight.
Controlled reps.
Focus on holding, not rushing.

See how your hands respond over a few weeks.

Many lifters find that when they return to a normal bar, it feels easier to control.

Not because the bar changed.
Because their grip did.

The Big Idea

The deadlift isn’t just about moving weight from the floor to your hips.

It’s about controlling that weight with your whole body, including your hands.

Monkee Grips don’t replace the deadlift.
They change how honest it is for your grip.

And sometimes, that’s exactly what a lifter needs to keep progressing.

If you’re curious, try a few sets and see for yourself.

Your deadlift might tell you more than you expect.

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