Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Choosing the Right Weight Lifting Program

By Wakelin Smith


The right weight lifting program is crucial in attaining the goal of any muscle builder seeking to build his muscle mass. It entails the design of a program that will bring about the desired result. This means that a muscle lifter should not simply go into the gym and throw weights around. Rather, he should have a specific routine to follow. Specifically, lifting weights involve weight training programs that are based on the proper science and tested techniques. According to some professional weight trainers, there are some rules that should be followed. Here are the five rules in weight training.

Stand with feet wider than shoulders and hold a heavy dumbbell in both hands. Bend knees and, keeping weight in the heels, lower butt until it is parallel to floor. Keep abs in and make sure you can see your toes. Push through the heels to raise back up and repeat. Come onto all fours, hands a bit wider than shoulders, lower body resting on knees. Pull the abs in and, keeping back straight, bend elbows and lower body towards the floor until elbows are at 90 degree angles. Push back up and repeat.

So the following workout must increase the number of reps with the same weight compared to the previous session. If the body builder intends to use the same number of reps from the previous sessions, he is required to increase the weight he would lift. Though he goes out of the gym more physically drained than the previous session, he is assured he went through a workout that trained the full body. Also, aside from seeing faster results, he need not go to the gym frequently as others do. This gives him enough time to do other important tasks.

Strength requires balance. This means that a weight trainer must balance his exercises between the push-based strength machines and pull-based ones. This is very important otherwise the body becomes structurally undeveloped. Look at it this way, if one only does one type of exercise and less on the other then he only develops the one that is exercised more.

Only after such training is he allowed to go through heavy training in the final phase. Unlike its counterpart, its focus is not to gain mass after every workout. Instead, it seeks to achieve cumulative gains after all of the three phases. Its general idea is to shift in intensity at every phase to prevent overtraining.

Stand with feet hip-width apart holding body bar, barbell (or dumbbells in front of thighs, palms out. Bend elbows and bring weights towards the shoulders (without swinging). Lower back down and repeat.

Finally, any type of weight lifting program involves scientific fundamentals. As such, it involves proper form and execution. Any weight lifter must approach it with precision and care. Otherwise, the time he spends in the gym comes to naught. It is important that he goes through the program with this in mind if he seeks to be successful in transforming his body into the muscle buff he desires that it becomes.




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