Ienan wrote:
Thanks guys. I'll definitely heed the advice. Two days of weights, one day of cardio. I'm also attempting to train for a 10k in June. I think I could run it without any training, but I just want to be able to finish it jogging across the finish line. Good idea on the squats. I think that would help my leg strength for the race. I was told to do most body groups each time at the gym instead of one group at a time. Do you find that's your experience?
I'll do the lean protein thing for dinner instead of protein shakes, too. Based on my diet nowadays after Weight Watchers, I get most of my food groups in a day, especially lean protein.
I would do cardio every day (twice a day if possible) and weights every other day or every 3rd day.
You'll be healthier. And the "definition" will come through sooner. Don't skimp on cardio...think about what it exercises...it's basically the foundation of all other exercise. Without strong lungs, heart and blood you just won't have energy. Yeah, people that lift weights get stronger and bigger and look better, but cardio gives you so much more, you feel amazing after you work out your lungs and heart, breathing is so much easier, it's amazing how much people skimp out on cardio. I'm a skinny dude, and I'm not afraid of cardio it wont make you wither away...then again, I'm not trying to build beach muscles.
Drink LOTS of water. I don't care how big and strong you look, if you're not hydrated, a dude half your size will laugh at you. You might be able to lift heavier stuff, but you wont last long at all.
Definitely never train single body parts. Do muscle groups. Big lifts....squats, bench, deadlift.......compound movements put as much of your body as you can into each exercise and go full extention. All the way, both ways...I mean, really stretch for it--it makes the difference between weightlifters who are bulky and weightlifters who are truly strong. You're cheating yourself if you don't have perfect technique. It's not how often or how much you work out, it's how you work out. It's also useful to train muscle groups that oppose the exact movement you train. For instance in a bench press motion your arms are pushing weight out, you should also try to train the same motion pulling the force inward----there are certain machines that do this. But yeah...compound movements for sure, isolation exercises are for therapy and body building. If you want to train your body to work better in real situations you have to use realistic movements that work huge groups of muscles, including all the tiny muscles. This is the crappy thing about weight training, despite how useful it can be. I realized this when I saw a little kid throw a baseball faster than a big macho man. Everyone was laughing. Don't be that guy. I bet 90% of the big huge dudes in a gym can't even do a cartwheel, whereas a little 6 year old can. I just don't get it.
Don't forget to stretch before and after and during and whenever. Oh, and lots of situps. Abs are so important.
Now I'm not tryin to force ya to work out a certain way, but I just think it's important that you know what weight training will do for you, and what it wont.