FIT AND HEALTHY

ONLINE HOME

STRENGTH TRAINING DIARY

 
   

 

Click on the cover to purchase your copy of the Strength Training Diary. The investment: $16.50aus.

 

That which we persist in doing becomes easier for us to do; not that the nature of the thing itself has changed, but that our power to do it is increased.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

 

KEEP TRACK OF YOUR WORKOUTS

If you've embarked on a strength training program you'll need to keep a record of your progress.

 

You need the Strength Training Diary, an ebook which you can purchase and download by clicking here. The investment: $5.50aus.

 

Over the weeks and months you'll see a big difference in the amount of weight you can lift.

 

To gain a glimpse of what's in the diary scroll down.

 

STRENGTH TRAINING FUNDAMENTALS

You're setting yourself up for musculo-skeletal dysfunction if you don't have a regular and systematic strength training program. As the muscles become weaker their ability to hold the body in its correct alignment are greatly diminished.

 

You can imagine, for instance the cause of your neck problem. The muscles of your neck and shoulders are not strong enough to hold you head on top of your shoulders. The head tilts forward and starts straining the muscles which start hurting. Sooner or later bones are moved out of alignment. Then it really hurts. A quick rub down, an anti-inflammatory and a muscle relaxant do nothing to fix the problem.

 

I've outlined two approaches to strength training. You can work out at home without much equipment, or you can go to a gym.

 

I recommend you do both. Go to a gym because you get a more systematic workout for strengthening the major muscle groups of your body.

 

It doesn't matter what age you are. Gyms world=wide are filling up with people in their 60's, 70's and 80's, all dedicated to keeping strong and flexible.

 

Most of the falls in older people are caused by lack of strength. Osteoporosis comes with lack of weight-bearing exercise.

 

STRENGTH

Strength is the ability of a muscle to exert a force.

 

Lack of strength is one of the main contributors to musculo-skeletal injury. The 40% of people sitting at their desks with crookbacks, stiff necks, cold shoulders and RSI are not strong enough to push a pen or tap a keyboard without getting a crook back, stiff neck, frozen shoulders or RSI.

 

Muscle strength and tone can be enhanced by working against a resistance in a regular and systematic strength training program.

Include the major muscle groups in your workouts: legs, trunk, arms and shoulders.

 

I recommend a strength training program that includes the following exercises, sets and repetitions.

 

STRENGTH AND MUSCLE BULK

The strength training program outlined below, with its high number of overall repetitions and ever increasing weight will provide you with a balanced approach to improving muscle strength (heavier weights, low repetitions) and muscle bulk, (lower weights, high repetitions).

 

Maintaining muscle bulk is essential if you are to keep your metabolic rate up. If your metabolic rate drops and you keep eating the same amount of food, you'll start putting on fat. Therefore an essential aspect of a fat loss program is to improve muscle bulk so you burn off more calories, even without exercising.

 

FREQUENCY

Three times a week is ideal.

 

WARM UP

I recommend that you spend 30 or more minutes on an aerobic machine, - use a bike, treadmill, eliptical, climber or stepper, or go for a fast walk, shuffle of jog before you start a weight training session. Make sure you get a good sweat up.

 

The second aspect of the warm up will be the first set of repetitions of each exercise. If the number of repetitions is high it will have its own warm up effect. I recommend you do 12 repetitions in the first set.

 

WEIGHT, SETS AND REPETITIONS

Repetitions of each exercise are grouped together in sets. 3 - 4 sets is about right for getting a good mix between building strength and muscle bulk. Three is OK. Less than that and you don't have sufficient stimulus to improve strength or muscle bulk.

 

1st set

Start with a weight that you can lift comfortably for about 12 repetitions. This will have its own warm-up effect and prepare you for the heavier weights to follow

2nd set

Up the weight and aim to do 10 repetitions

3rd set

Up the weight and aim to do 8 repetitions

4th set

Up the weight and aim to do 6 repetitions

 

STRENGTH TRAINING FUNDAMENTALS

Using trial and error, you will soon gain an appreciation of the amount of weight that is right for you for each set. Increase the weight to the point where you can just reach the desired number of repetitions.

 

THE EXERCISES - the muscle groups and sequence

I recommend you do a work-out which includes exercises for the major muscle groups of your body. I recommend you pair them up and do them in the following order.

 

1.

Arms and upper body

                       

                           Bench press                                 Seated row

                 Pectoral and triceps               Rhomboids and biceps

2.

Legs

              

                   Leg extention                              Leg curl    

       Quadriceps, buttock and calves          Hamstrings and lower back

3.

Arms and upper body

                       

                      

                        Shoulder press                                 Lat pulldown

                  Deltoid and triceps                     Latissimus and biceps

4.

Trunk

                  

      Sit-ups                                  Back extension                  Hip flexor

   Abdominals, hip flexors           Back extensors                 Hip flexors

   quadriceps and tibials

   

Trunk

                  

      Sit-ups                                  Back extension                  Hip flexor

   Abdominals, hip flexors           Back extensors                 Hip flexors

   quadriceps and tibials

 

Supersets

It is very time consuming to do the exercises for one muscle group at a time. I recommend pairing two exercises and doing them together; eg leg extension and leg curl.

 

Start off doing by doing a set of leg extensions and then move to the leg curl. During the leg curl set, the leg extensor muscles get a rest and vice versa. This method of strength training is called a superset routine.

 

In a superset routine you go through the whole routine of three or four sets for each two muscle groups as though it were a mini-circuit. This keeps the strength training action in the same area of the body whilst giving each muscle group time to recover before the next set of repetitions.

 

I've grouped the exercises in such a way that you can work through the exercises quickly and systematically and so that you can give each muscle group a rest between sets.

 

In effect you are doing a mini-circuit, but one which is much more effective in increasing strength and muscle bulk.

 

Combination exercises

I've also chosen combination exercises, that is, more than one muscle group is being exercised at the same time, and indicated alongside each of the exercises below, which muscles of the body are being given a workout.

 

   Leg extension - quadriceps and buttocks

   Leg curl - hamstrings and lower back

   Bench press - pectoral and triceps

   Seated row - rhomboids and biceps

   Overhead press - deltoid and triceps

   Lat pull down - latissimus and biceps

 

SAMPLE STRENGTH TRAINING RECORD CARD

Photocopy this sheet and use it as a way of recording your weight training progress. Over the weeks and the months you'll notice a gradual improvement in the amount of weight you can lift.

 

 

 

 

Date  ..../....

 

Date  ..../....

 

Date  ..../....

 

 

EXERCISE

 

1

2

3

4

 

1

2

3

4

 

1

2

3

4

 

 

1

Reps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2

Reps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3

Wt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Click here and purchase your copy of the Strength Training Diary. The investment: $5.50aus.