Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Program Design 101




Effective exercise programming is made up of several key elements.  Of course the first question is: Where to begin? Most of us either go into the gym blind or you are stuck in your same routine. For men, it's Chest/Tri day, back/bi, Arms/core and legs if you're lucky. Sometimes you go a little crazy and throw in some super sets. Women, you hit triceps, abs and glutes hoping to solve your problem areas before 45 minutes of low intensity cardio. 

To overcome this ineffective training (please don't get me wrong I am happy you at least train), here is a very basic way to build a program with some rhyme and reason. Please 

The easiest way to begin writing a program is to work backwards.  First, ask yourself how many times a week you want to workout.  Make this realistic and something you will stick to!!!  This will be your Training Frequency.  2 days a week is doable, 3 days is optimal for most people, 4 days a week is usually reserved for athletes or intense programs with a great amount of volume. 

Next, we have to know what we’re doing each day before we go into the gym. This is our Movement Selections.  We view our movement selections as having four main options:

1.)  Upper body push movements (push-up, bench, presses)
2.)  Lower body push movements (squat/lunge variations)
3.)  Upper body pull movements (rows and pull-ups)
4.)  Lower body pull movements (deadlifts, rdls, glute bridges)

Our goal is to stimulate each muscle group and movement pattern 2x within a 7 day period.  You can accomplish this easily by first combining opposing movement selections from the upper and lower body.  So if we use upper body push movements, we combine them with lower body pull movements and vice versa.  In two and three day a week programs, you will also have to include some full body workouts. 

Next, set up your strength blocks (grouping of exercises), which should simply include:

1)   A strength or power movement
2)   The opposing strength movement
3)   A core exercise
4)   A corrective exercise (active recovery)

To this point you have your training frequency, training splits and a blueprint.  Filling in your blueprint with exercises now has meaning to it.

Make sure to stay within your limits; do not choose an exercise or a progression of an exercise that you have not yet earned.  Also be sure to choose exercises that compliment each other.  So if you do an upper body push strength movement, do a corrective exercise for those same muscle groups.  Here is an example:

1.)  Upper Push Movement: Alternating Chest Press
2.)  Core Movement- Rotating Wood Chops
3.)  Corrective- Active Pec Stretch

Once you have filled your strength blocks with appropriate and specific exercises, we need to select the appropriate sets, reps, and rest. To guide you, we put together a basic strength-training continuum: 



Your goal decides where you land on the continuum.  As you can see, maximal strength gains come from heavier weight loads with fewer reps and endurance gains are typically seen on the completely opposite end of the spectrum with a much greater amount of reps. Hypertrophy (muscle growth) usually falls in the middle. 

Lastly is the amount of rest needed. This is up to you. Rule of thumb: higher reps w/ lower loads require less recovery time. Low reps with high loads require more time to have the muscle recover. Key take home with rest: DO NOT SACRIFICE FORM FOR WEIGHT/REPS. Let your body recover and the gains come quicker and safer. 

That is a very simple approach to the way we program.  However, the basics are both safe and effective.  Follow this blueprint and you will see success with your programming for years to come.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Top 3 Reasons Women Should LIft Weights



The concerns are always the same. "I do not want to get bulky," or, "I am just trying to tone up."  All too often you hear women making these statements on their way to lifting a bright colored, 5lb db to do some tricep kick-backs because they carry some extra body fat there. Or they pop on a cardio machine for 45 minutes at a low intensity, while reading a cosmo. That is no different than a hamster on a wheel.

What women fail to realize is that resistance training is the single best program element (if done correctly) that will meet all their fitness needs!!

Hit the weights hard and often ladies, because you can't get bulky. You will also get the tone and definition you are after. Here are the the top 3 reasons why women should resistance train:



1.     You Burn Body Fat
Total body resistance training puts a larger demand on the body than most cardio and allows you to burn calories throughout the day. Adding lean mass also increases metabolism. For every 1lb of lean mass you gain, you can burn 35-55 kcals extra/day while at rest and during normal activity. 

2.    Strength without Bulk
Women have 10-30x less hormones than men, meaning your chances of getting ‘bulky’ is near impossible. Additionally, women begin to lose their strength and roughly .5lb/muscle per year after 18. Get your strength and muscle back!

3.    Fight Osteoporosis
Women have a higher % of osteoporosis than men. Strength training contributes to stronger bone density. Studies show an increase in bone density as high as 13% in 6 months!

Strength training is vital for everyone and the list of its benefits are endless. Women have a larger demand to train because of the lean mass and strength loss factors that take place over the years. We encourage all women to give strength training a shot. Put down the bright colored dumbbells and pick up something heavy!!