Wednesday, January 8, 2014

What is a good workout?

The vast majority of people leaving a gym will talk about how great their workout was because they “got crushed” or can’t feel their arms. But the fact that you vomited doesn’t mean you had a great workout. So how do you know if your workout was good or not? First off, think about your goals. Then answer this question- is your workout getting you there?

If your goal is to lose a significant amount of weight, doing a boatload of tricep extensions will leave you sore but won’t get you any closer to your goal. You should be doing high intensity, compound movements. Just because you don’t get a crazy arm pump, doesn’t mean your body isn’t working hard. If you’re an athlete, you need to get stronger, improve your patterns, get better at your sport, and prevent yourself from being injured. Does doing drop sets of leg extensions make you want to vom? Probably. Does it make you a better athlete? Probably not. Chances are, you have practices to attend so not being able to walk for 3 days is probably not in your favor. Even if you’re not an athlete, you probably want to be able to sit on the toilet without having to lower yourself onto it with the aid of a towel rack.

Being sore is a symptom of delayed onset muscle soreness- which is your body responding to a new exercise or a seriously increased load. It is also pretty much only caused by exercises with an eccentric movement. However, if you are doing the same exercise (for example, squats), your body will not have nearly the same response as the first time you squatted and you won’t feel that same soreness. Does that mean squats aren’t a productive exercise anymore? Do I even have to answer that question? Unless you’e been doing the same weight for a long time (or less weight), the exercise is still productive. Just because your muscles aren’t on fire, doesn’t mean you aren’t getting anything out of it. You could do pretty much any new exercise- no matter how stupid- and still be sore from it. You could do a series of bizarre movements and feel like you go hit by a truck the next day just because it’s something new- not necessarily something beneficial.

If you leave a workout and don’t feel absolutely crushed and wanting to pass out, ask yourself if what you did was conducive to your goals. If the answer is yes, you had a good workout. Do you expect every workout to leave you lying on the cold floor pleading for death or do you want consistently progressive workouts that will get you to your goal and keep you there?

PS That was a rhetorical question

-Coach Lily

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