by Mike Geary, Certified Nutrition Specialist, Certified Personal Trainer
author - The Truth about Six Pack Abs
This is one of the biggest weight training
mistakes I've seen over and over again with so many people over the
years... it may seem obvious to some advanced trainees, but for most
beginner or intermediate people, I've noticed that they make this
mistake in the gym MOST of the time...
And that has to do with sets and reps, and the intensity that they are performed.
Let me explain...
What I've noticed is one of the main reasons for
lack of progress in the gym is that most people are not performing their
reps and sets to challenge their body enough. I'm not referring to rest
period between sets either (although that is definitely part of the
equation).
For example, many people see a routine in my
program or one of my colleagues programs (or even a magazine)... let's
say the routine calls for 4 sets of 6 reps of a given exercise... and
they just choose a random weight (or a weight that they "think" they are
comfortable with) and do 4 sets of 6 reps.
But THAT'S where the major mistake comes in,
because they didn't even train remotely close to muscular failure. In
reality, they could have completed 4 sets of 12 reps or more with the
weight they chose to do for 4 sets of 6 reps... and then they wonder why
they're not seeing results!
The answer is simple... they're not seeing results
because they didn't challenge the body enough and therefore, the body
has no reason to need to improve.
The right way to do it is this... If the routine
calls for 4 sets of 6 reps, then you should barely be able to complete
the sixth rep. Form should still stay good, but it should be a challenge
to complete that 6th rep, and a 7th rep would be pretty much out of the
question to complete in good form.
Now THAT'S how you train to challenge your body
and force it to adapt to the stressor. And that means you get results
and your body CHANGES for the better over time.
Now it's a little more complicated than that,
because there are dozens of other factors that come into play that
determine whether you will effectively make progressions in the gym,
based on sets, reps, intensity level, rest and recovery, nutrition, etc.
And once you get into advanced training, you will
literally be exhausted... with your chest heaving for breaths if you hit
the rep range on some exercises with the right weight and intensity from just 1 SET.
For example, if I'm using a heavy enough weight,
even as little as 4 reps of heavy deadlifts can leave my entire body
exhausted and I'll be gasping for air for 30-40 seconds after that set
(and I'm in pretty damn good shape too)... and that was just from 4 REPS!
But that is a great example of how hard I
challenged my body to do those 4 reps and stay in good form... because I
chose a weight that was extremely hard for me to complete 4 reps.
Sounds crazy, because most people only think of "cardio"
as something that can make you gasp for air and have your heart beating
out of your chest... but training with weights at a high enough
intensity and challenging weight using the right exercises is actually
creating MORE of a reason for your body to respond and change.
Give me a marathoner and have them do a super high
intensity set of clean & presses, or heavy 1-arm snatches (or even
20-rep barbell squats) and that marathoner will be on the floor gasping
for air if they worked hard enough on the weight training sets.
If you think this is one of the mistakes you've
been making in the gym, jack up that intensity and use heavier weights
that actually CHALLENGE YOUR BODY, and you just may start to see some more dramatic results with your body!
Check out these weird tips to lose your stomach fat
Saturday, 26 September 2015
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» 1 Big Weight Training Mistake That You Might be Making
1 Big Weight Training Mistake That You Might be Making
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abdominal fat, deadlifts, exercises, fat burning, high-intensity workouts, reps, stomach fat, weight training
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