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Making Time For Training
"Goals + determination + persistence -
doubts = your reality"
Making Time For Strength Training
This article is for those of you who have very limited time to
devote to exercise, but are serious about getting or staying in
shape. Most fitness experts agree that even devoting 30 minutes
to strength training two or three times a week is sufficient for
strength and muscle development. Many people make the mistake of
adding more exercises and sets to their program to make it
harder. To increase intensity, do not look for ways to do more
exercise, look for ways to do the same or even less, by
efficiency. Try to increase the intensity and shorten your
workout time by using the following methods.
1. Make sure exercise is convenient: Getting to your exercise
equipment should be easy and convenient. If you have to drive a
half an hour to get to your gym, you will view working out as a
chore. If you spend more time traveling to the gym than you do in
the gym, you might want to consider a program that you can do in
your home. Muscles do not care where the resistance comes
from--they are going to respond. Resistance can be from body
weight (push-ups),
Thera-bandPÿPPZ©@jMaking Time For
Strength Training This article is for those of you who have very
limited time to devote to exercise, but are serious about getting
or staying in shape. Most fitness experts agree that even
devoting 30 minutes to strength training two or three times a
week is sufficient for strength and muscle development. Many
people make the mistake of adding more exercises and sets to
their program to make it harder. To increase intensity, do not
look for ways to do more exercise, look for ways to do the same
or even less, by efficiency. Try to increase the intensity and
shorten your workout time by using the following methods.
2. Work several muscles in one exercise: Another way to fit
weightlifting into your busy schedule is to choose exercises that
work several major muscle groups at the same time. Squats or the
Leg Press (you can find the instructions and video demonstrations
for these and many other exercises on my site) works the
quadriceps, hamstrings, buttocks, and calves. Essentially, you
will be training four muscle groups at the same time with these
exercises.
3. Limit resting time: Skip the usual minute or so of resting
time between exercises. You can do this by doing Supersets, which
involves doing two or more successive exercises for a given
muscle group without rest in between. This can be done one of two
ways: The first is to do two or more exercises in a row for the
same muscle group without any rest in between. For example, do a
set of the Shoulder Presses and follow them immediately with a
set of Lateral Raises. This saves time and forces a lot more
blood into the shoulders and provides a more intense and
effective training stimulus for the shoulder muscles. The second
way to do supersets is to train two opposing muscle groups
without any rest in between. You can use this superset style of
training for two different muscle groups, but only if they have
an agonist/antagonist relationship with each other. In other
words, on any given lift one muscle is contracting and the other
muscle is relaxing (such as the biceps and triceps when
performing a biceps curl). Choose muscle groups that are
physically close together such as biceps and triceps, or chest
and back, or quadriceps and hamstrings.
4. Have alternate exercises for each muscle group: This is
especially important for those who are pressed for time. Often
there will be someone working on the piece of equipment you want
to use. You should always have a back-up plan, an alternate
exercise that trains the same muscle group.
I hope you found this information helpful. Your greatest
challenge 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 time for yourself
and make strength training a priority.
When you begin achieving great results, the excitement and fun
you experience will make the change and time you've spent well
worth the effort. Action creates motivation! Good luck: I hope
you enjoy all the wonderful benefits of an effective strength
training program.
Benefits of Strength Training
Strength training is exercise that uses resistance--for
example, weights--to strengthen and condition the musculoskeletal
system, improving muscle tone and endurance.
"Strength-training" is used as a general term
synonymous with other common terms: "weightlifting" and
"resistance training." Physiologically, the benefits of
consistent strength training include an increase in muscle size
and tone, increased muscle strength, and increases in tendon,
bone, and ligament strength. Strength-training has also been
shown to improve psychological health as well, by increasing
self-esteem, confidence and self-worth.
These improvements have a great influence on our physical
performance, metabolic efficiency, physical appearance and risk
of injury. I'll go into each of these in detail, outlining some
very exciting benefits of a good strength-training program that
most people overlook or don't realize.
Improved Physical Performance and Appearance
One important result of strength training is increased
physical performance. Muscles quite literally utilize energy to
produce movement, functioning as the engine or powerhouse of the
body. Strength training increases the muscles' size, strength,
and endurance, which contribute to improvements in our work, our
favorite sports and hobbies, and our general day-to-day
activities.
Another benefit of a good strength-training program is its
effect on our overall appearance and body composition, which can
directly influence self-esteem, self-worth, and level of
confidence. Take, for example, a 170-pound man who has 20 percent
body fat--34 pounds of fat weight and 136 pounds of lean body
weight (muscle, bones, organs, water, etc.) By beginning an
effective strength training program, he replaces five pounds of
fat with five pounds of muscle. He still weighs 170 pounds, but
he is now 17 percent fat--with 29 pounds of fat weight and 141
pounds of lean body weight. Although his body weight remains the
same, his strength, muscle tone, and metabolism have improved,
giving him a firmer, more fit appearance.
Both our physical appearance and our physical performance can
be improved by muscle gain or hampered by muscle loss. Research
indicates that unless we strength train regularly, we lose more
than one-half pound of muscle every year of our lives after age
25. Unless we implement a safe and effective strength-training
program, our muscles gradually decrease in size and strength in
the process called "atrophy."
Strength training is therefore important for preventing the
muscle loss that normally accompanies the aging process. A common
misconception is that as we get older, it is normal to stop being
active and to start using ambulatory aides like canes and
wheelchairs. Many people think we have no choice; they think this
is normal.
But this couldn't be further from the truth. There is
absolutely no reason why all of us can't be physically, mentally,
socially, and sexually active, living a healthy vibrant life
until the very day we die! The reason many elderly people rely on
ambulatory aides and become slower and fatter is simply that over
the years their muscles are decreasing, so their physical
performance and metabolism also decrease, becoming less
efficient.
Metabolic Efficiency That one-half pound of muscle loss every
year after age 25 produces a one-half percent reduction in basal
metabolic rate (BMR) every year. A reduction in BMR means that
our bodies are less able to use the food we consume as
energy--thus more gets stored as body fat. Everyone has an
individual basal metabolic rate. "Basal metabolic rate"
refers to the energy used by our body at rest to maintain normal
body functions.
Our muscles have high energy requirements. Even when we are
sleeping, our muscles use more than 25 percent of our energy
(calories). When you implement the principles of effective
strength-training, and if you are consistent in your program, you
will achieve an increase in lean muscle mass throughout your body
and increase your BMR. In other words, you can actually condition
your metabolism to work better and more efficiently even when you
are at rest. An increase in muscle tissue causes an increase in
metabolic rate, and a decrease in muscle tissue causes a decrease
in metabolic rate.
Once again: adults who are not on a safe, effective
strength-training program will experience an annual half-pound
loss of muscle and half-percent reduction in metabolic rate
unless they begin some form of strength training. The gradual
decrease in muscle and BMR is related to the increase in body fat
that most people gain as they get older if they do not strength
train. With a decrease in muscle, less energy is used for daily
metabolic function, so calories previously necessary to perform
the activities of daily living now end up stored as fat.
You can see that anyone interested in decreasing body fat
percentage--and their risk of disease--as well as in increasing
physical performance and appearance, should be strength training
to help condition their metabolism (BMR).
One of the biggest mistakes people make when starting a
weight-management program is not including a strength-training
program with their cardiovascular exercise and low-fat eating
regimen. This is unfortunate because when we cut calories without
exercise, we can lose muscle as well as fat. Many do not choose
to do strength training because 1) they mistakenly think they are
going to make their body big and bulky, and 2) they do not
realize how beneficial and important strength training is in a
weight-management program. Whether it is strength, endurance,
muscle size or muscle tone (or a combination) you desire, all are
very realistic and obtainable.
Decreased Risk of Injury Our muscles also function as shock
absorbers and serve as important balancing agents throughout our
body. Well-conditioned muscles help to lessen the repetitive
landing forces in weight-bearing activities such as jogging or
playing basketball. Well-balanced muscles reduce the risk of
injuries that result when a muscle is weaker than its opposing
muscle group. For example, jogging places more stress on the
hamstrings and calves than it does on the quadriceps, creating a
muscle imbalance that often leads to knee injuries; so it is very
important that runners be on a good strength-training program
that includes training the quadriceps as well as the hamstrings
and calves.
To reduce the risk of unbalanced muscle development, you
should make sure that when you are training a specific muscle
group, the opposing muscle groups are being trained as well
(though not necessarily on the same day). For example, if you are
doing strength training exercises for your chest, you should
include back exercises in your program as well.
By now you have probably realized that weightlifting should be
an important part of your exercise routine. Weightlifting
provides many important benefits that cannot be achieved by any
other exercise or activity. 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. This
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