Keskeiset käsitteet
Gradual and balanced weight progression is crucial for long-term muscle growth and joint health, rather than chasing rapid weight increases.
Tiivistelmä
The article discusses the common mistake of aggressively increasing weights in the gym, which can lead to various issues. It highlights the importance of a more balanced and sustainable approach to strength training.
The key points are:
- Rapidly increasing weights beyond realistic expectations can result in poor joint health, increased risk of muscular injury, and even heart-related problems.
- The author suggests using Epley's formula, which relates one-repetition maximum (1RM) to the number of repetitions performed at a certain weight. This allows for a more controlled and progressive weight increase.
- The approach involves periodically incorporating lighter weights with higher repetitions to build muscular endurance and engage dormant muscle fibers, before gradually increasing the weight for the target lift.
- This method helps ensure a safer and more sustainable strength-building process, avoiding the pitfalls of chasing rapid weight increases.
Tilastot
If you've been aggressively increasing the weights you lift of, let's say, bench press. You move it up to 80kg for 5 reps, but, you wanted to hit 90kg for 8 reps and now moving forward gets slower.
So you bench 50kg for higher reps, let's say 20–25, during the following week/during the same week when the bench press is scheduled again. Then you increase the reps up to 30. Now put the values of the weight, i.e. 50kg and the reps, that makes your 1RM approximately 100kg.
Further to ensure clean 8 reps on 90kg, you increase the weight from 50 to 55 or maybe even 60kg and keep the reps high and through more willpower make it reach 30, then solidify the number with ease of exercise over time as your body adapts. Then putting in the respective values in the formula makes the 1RM as 120kg approximately.
Lainaukset
"The more muscle you pack on, the more is blood needed to be pumped by your heart and the speed running that process will make it harder for your heart to adapt & trust me, Heart is that muscle of your body which you don't want to train till failiure!"