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Strength
Training Exercise Principles and Guidelines: Strength Training
Exercises Part Five
By Chad Tackett
Almost any form of exercise will stimulate some
degree of strength and muscle development. Unfortunately, misconceptions,
myths, and misunderstandings plague the fitness industry, especially
in regard to strength training. There is a huge attrition rate
among those starting a strength training program primarily because
most people are not taught the principles essential for a safe
and effective program.
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This article is part five of a five part series
discussing the very important principles and guidelines of a safe
and effective strength training program. This article discusses
exactly how to avoid the common mistake of overtraining. The previous
article, part four of this five part series, discusses the importance
of using the right amount of weight and number of repititions
for each set, so you can achieve the results you desire. The following
exercise guidelines are extremely important for your safety and
the effectiveness of your strength training program.
Strength Training Routines: Avoid Overtraining
If you feel burnt out, weak, and/or sore, you
are probably overtraining. Not providing your muscles with enough
rest will often prevent you from making improvements. Training
the wrong muscle groups on consecutive days will also counteract
your good results. Doing too many sets and exercises per muscle
group will also cause overtraining.
Remember that weightlifting, especially in an
intense program, produces tissue microtrauma, those tiny tears
in the muscles that temporarily decrease strength and cause varying
degrees of muscle soreness. It is absolutely necessary to provide
ample rest time between successive training sessions. Muscles
generally require about 48 hours for the resting and rebuilding
process before you work them again.
You should never train the same muscle groups
on two or more days in a row (abdominals are the exception). Hypothetically
then, you would do your chest, shoulders, triceps, and abdominals
on Monday; on Tuesday you would train your legs, back, biceps,
and abdominals; you would take Wednesday off to give all your
muscle groups extra rest; on Thursday you'd do chest, shoulders,
triceps, and abdominals again; and on Friday you'd do legs, back,
biceps, and abdominals again. This would allow two days (48 hours)
of rest for each muscle between training days.
Those of you who train very intensely, would
benefit greatly by taking even more rest time between sessions.
A week does not have to be limited to only seven days--you can
expand it to eight, nine, or even ten days. Think about it: why
not? Day one could consist of chest, shoulders, triceps, (pushing
muscles) and abdominals on Monday. Take Tuesday off. On day two,
Wednesday, the routine could consist of legs, back, biceps, (pulling
muscles) and abdominals. Take Thursday off. On Friday you do chest,
shoulders, triceps, and abdominals again--and so on.
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This is especially important when mixing pushing
and pulling muscles for different sessions. For example, if you
train your chest on Monday and then triceps the next day, your
triceps never really get a complete rest because they are indirectly
trained with your chest on Monday and directly trained on Tuesday.
But if you split up chest/shoulders/triceps or back/biceps, working
them on different days, you can implement this eight day program
for maximum muscle resting time. Remember: always allow your muscles
a chance to grow, especially when you are feeling overtrained.
If needed, give yourself an extra day off to grow. Never feel
guilty about skipping a workout. That extra rest could be exactly
what your body needs.
Many people make the mistake of doing too many
sets per exercise, and/or doing too many exercises per muscle
group. It's very common for people who want great muscle size
and strength gains to simply do too much for each muscle group
and overtrain to the point where they do more harm than good.
A common weightlifting recommendation is to do at least four sets
for each exercise and at least four exercises for each muscle
group. This idea that "more is better" is a big misconception
in the strength training industry and is recommended in many "muscle
magazines" and other sources.
But when you see Mr. or Ms. Olympia in muscle
magazines describing their workouts of four to five sets per exercise
and four to five exercises per muscle group, do not be fooled
into thinking that if you want their results you have to do what
they do. These are professional body builders, quite likely to
be on steroids; they can get away with these very intense long
programs because their muscles are able to rebuild very quickly.
If you are not on steroids--and for the sake of your health I
hope you are not--your muscles will not be able to rebuild themselves
quickly enough to make gains.
For each of the large muscle groups in the body
such as back, chest, shoulders, quadriceps, and hamstrings, two
to four exercises for each muscle is enough. For the smaller muscle
groups such as biceps, calves, trapezius, etc. one to three exercises
are enough. Because your back, for example, has specific muscles
that need to be isolated, it is important that of the three exercises
you perform, you do one that primarily targets each of the three
areas: upper-middle back, lats., and lower back.
When you're doing two to four exercises for
each muscle group, make sure you don't duplicate movements of
specific muscle groups. For example, it makes no sense to do three
sets of Bench Press using a barbell and then do three sets of
Bench Press using dumbbells or Push-ups. Each of these exercises
requires exactly the same movement and works the same specific
muscle. Instead, it would make much more sense to do bench press
for overall middle chest (either barbell, dumbbell, or machine);
do incline bench press for upper chest; and do dips for lower-outer
chest.
One point--maybe the most important of all for
ongoing strength training programs--that is absolutely imperative
to understand and implement into your training regimen is the
need to overcome training plateaus. Ideally, you want to always
be going through a momentum phase in which you try something new
and "shock" your muscles, forcing them to make gains.
Eventually however, you will come to a point in your training
where you either get bored or stop seeing results.
When this happens it is absolutely crucial that
you change what you are doing; this is when you need to get creative
by incorporating something new into your program. You can make
effective changes in your program in many ways: try new or alternate
exercises, change the order that you train your muscles or the
order of the exercises, and so forth.
I hope you have found the information in these
five part series of articles helpful. You now have the knowledge
to achieve the results you desire and the benefits your body deserves.
Your greatest challenge, however, is not learning new exercises
or the proper technique; it's not learning how many sets or reps
to do or how much weight to use. Nor is it deciding when or how
to change your routine. The greatest challenge facing you at this
moment is deciding whether you are willing to take action and
make strength training a priority.
When you begin achieving great results, the
excitement and fun you experience will make the change well worth
the effort. Action creates motivation! Good luck: I hope you enjoy
all the wonderful benefits of an effective strength training program.
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