Posts Tagged ‘Free Weights’

PostHeaderIcon Strength Training is All in the Mind



What is strength training?

Strength training is performing exercises with the intention of making your muscles stronger. These exercises generally take the form of performing a movement against a resistance, for example your bodyweight or free weights.

How strength training is different to bodybuilding

Bodybuilding and strength training are often mistakenly thought of as being the same thing because they use similar techniques, but there are some key differences in the training methods, the end results and most importantly, the primary aim. In bodybuilding, there is one goal: aesthetics. The aim is to increase the size, definition and symmetry of muscles to build an impressively muscular physique. Bodybuilders increase in strength as they train, but this is only a side effect of their training. In strength training, the main aim is to increase the strength of the muscles. Strength training will also tend to increase the size of the muscles, but not to anywhere near the same extent as bodybuilding.

Factors affecting strength

In essence, strength is a measure of the ability of a muscle to exert a force against a resistance. Although the size of a muscle is often related to its strength, one does not always follow the other. It is possible to massively increase your strength without gaining much, if any, muscle mass and it is also possible to increase the size of your muscles without gaining much strength. Increasing muscle mass will increase your strength because you will have more muscle fibres to exert a force. However, when you lift a weight, you never actually use all the available muscle fibres at the same time. By learning to increase the number you use, you can increase your strength without increasing your muscle mass. The number of fibres activated in the muscle depends on the signal that they receive from the brain. When training specifically to gain strength, your nervous system will learn to activate a greater proportion of the muscle fibres, which increases your strength.

Training the brain

If you want to get stronger, you need to focus on the nervous system because it is this that has a greater influence on your strength than anything else. Unsurprisingly, the best way to train your nervous system is to lift heavy weights. Increasing your strength is primarily about training the connection between your mind and your muscles. By exerting large forces to lift heavy weights, your nervous system will learn to adapt to them. You need to be lifting weights such that you can only manage between two to five repetitions per set. Any more than this and the weight isn’t heavy enough. Training frequency also has a big effect. For maximum strength gains you need to train regularly and often.

Most bodybuilding routines train each body part only once per week to allow the muscles to fully recover. Strength training taxes the muscles in a different way so the recovery period needed is not so long; it is primarily the nervous system that is being trained. You should be aiming to train each body part around twice a week. Strength training workouts should be short, but intense. You should not be training to failure. Training to failure will increase the time needed to recover, which will not help you gain strength. Choosing the right exercises is also important for building strength. The most effective forms of exercise for strength are heavy compound lifts and bodyweight exercises. For example, barbell squats and pull-ups.

Summary

You can build up your muscles all you want, but if you aren’t focused on the right exercises, your nervous system won’t adapt and you won’t get stronger. Strength Training is all in the mind.

PostHeaderIcon Strength Training – The Forgotten Secret



Ladies tend to shy away from working with weights for a number of reasons.

PostHeaderIcon Get Moving With Residential Fitness Equipment



The cost of a gym membership may be the only thing stopping you from getting fit. If so, you can still work out effectively at home. In fact, many North Americans need to get fit somehow and the home is a great place to start. Choose the residential fitness equipment which will help you to build muscle and burn fat. What you choose may be dictated by space or finances, by there is something out there for everyone. If you have some kind of fitness equipment, it may become just as easy to start working out as it would be to find something to eat.

One simple, inexpensive accessory is a set of free weights. Use these simply to work muscle, or combine them with a cardio work out. Even gentle movements and poses with your weights will work your heart. Choose from various weights, as little as one pound or ten pounds at a time. Select a colored weight with comfortable grip or all metal one. Building muscle will help you to burn fat and support weaker parts of your body.

Vary your weight work out with resistance bands. These are harder to lift with momentum, requiring pure strength, and are easy to travel with. Other options include ankle and wrist weights which attach via velcro or other fastener. Wearing these during a walk or run intensifies the work out. Even wear these while you perform exercises at home.

The fitness ball has become increasingly popular for home fitness. This accessory comes in handy for use with weights, while practising yoga, during aerobics and more. Even sitting on the ball requires the use of core muscles. Children like the ball too and if you have more than one you can perform simple routines together. Imagine: your child may get stronger while playing and never even realize.

Your aerobic step can really increase your quota of sweat per work out. Most brands come with risers to make you step up higher as your fitness increases. Adjust your height for the way you feel on the day. Use your step as a bench when doing sit-ups or chest flies.

For those who consider running or walking boring, set-up a treadmill in your living room. Set your goal on the digital controls, then watch a movie or television show while you work out. Before you know it, the exercise will be over. Program your treadmill for walking or running speed.

You stationary bike needs no lock so no fear of forgetting your combination. Take it for a spin while catching-up with programs you have been recording. The most technically advanced models include digital options to simulate real bike riding conditions. Slip a tourist DVD of France into your player and pretend your are pedaling along scenic Alsace trails.

Maybe money is not your concern. Just motivating yourself to get out the door may be the problem especially if sweating around other people makes you feel self-conscious. For those with a bit of money to spend, many mechanical devices exist, simulating sports activities. Try a rowing machine or an elliptical trainer for high-tech exercise.

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