10.27.2005

Different Ways for Women to Progress in Weight Training

Submitted by a reader:

A woman I met at a summer barbecue told me she started a weight lifting program but stopped after only a short while. When I asked her why, she responded that increasing weight each time she worked out was too hard --she couldn't do it. It hurt.

The goal of strength training is to get stronger and healthier and to improve your appearance. The body must always be challenged in any weight training routine, otherwise you will start to see declining results. But it should never hurt. It should never be painful.

We have listed several ways in which you can increase strength by your workout. You have a number of options from which to choose.

Increase Weight

The most common and effective way to challenge your body is to increase the weight you are lifting. This alone will keep your body challenged for a good while. Each muscle is comprised of numerous muscle fibers, and the more weight you lift, the more muscle fibers are recruited for the job, and the more your body gets a full workout. When we increase weight, we should always be vigilant about performing the exercise with proper form. If that form is compromised during a weight increase, it may be that your body is telling you it needs a different method of getting to the same result. Some alternative methods when we are not ready to increase weight are described below.

Increase Repetitions

The standard range is to perform 8-12 repetitions of a movement in one set. Do not exceed that maximum range. There is no weight training benefit to doing more than 12 reps per set unless you are in physical rehabilitation from an injury.

Increase Number of Sets

Normally you perform 2-3 sets per exercise. If you’ve done two sets at the same weight, increase to three.

Increase Frequency of Workouts

If you are working out two times a week, increase to three, if three times, then four. You should not weight train more than two days in a row unless you're training requires it(for instance, if your are a bodybuilder). Your muscles get stronger, not during the workout phase, but during the rest phase.

Increase Intensity

There are two ways to increase intensity without increasing weight - super sets and compound sets. Super sets involve exercising two opposing muscle groups by following one exercise immediately with another. For example, do a set of dumbbell bicep curls, then, without a rest period, do a set of standing tricep pushdowns. Rest. Repeat. Compound sets- involve exercising the same muscle group by attaching one exercise to another. For example, do a set of chest presses, then without a rest period, do a set of dumbbell chest flyes. Rest. Repeat.

Change Tempo

Slowing down the negative (eccentric) portion of exercise will promote more muscle development. This phase is usually the downward portion of an exercise, when you are lowering the weight. External resistance (usually gravity) is greater than the tension in your muscles. For example, during a chest press, the eccentric phase is when you are lowering the dumbbells towards your chest.

Change Position

Go from flat, to incline, or decline. A change in position forces you to exercise different parts of your muscles, helping you to achieve a more well-rounded workout.

Use Resistance Bands with Dumbbells

If you are doing a one-armed standing bicep curl, place a resistance band underneath your left leg, slide your left arm through the other end of band, gripping the dumbbell with the same hand. Repeat with your right side. Your exercise will have added resistance near top of movement because of the added tension exerted by the resistance band. This means you challenge your muscles at both the beginning and at the end of the movement, allowing you to exercise more parts of your muscles.

Increase Length of Levers

Weight held further away from your body exerts more tension on the muscles. For instance, if you are doing chest flyes, instead of keeping arms bent, straighten them.

Add Instability to Your Workout

For instance, if using a bench, change to a stability ball. If doing lunges, try them on a balance disc. If doing a bicep curl, try doing it while standing on one leg (the one opposite your lifting arm). Adding instability to your exercise regimen will force your body to exercise your supporting muscles as well as the targeted muscle groups.

In brief, by utilizing the various methods mentioned to increase strength, you will continue to develop muscle. And the more muscles you develop, the more calories you burn, the younger you feel, the greater your appearance will improve.

author -- Linda Kravitz, CEO, PowerFit LLC
http://www.thefitwomanonline.com

9 Comments:

At 9:05 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

All of your suggestions increase the intensity of the exercise. The woman's original complaint was that continually increasing intensity was causing her discomfort from physical pain. Hence, you did not address the woman's concerns, which could indeed be addressed quite adroitly.

Suck it up.

In a manner of speaking, of course. You were non-specific about when the pain occurred. If it occurred after workouts, you should have given her a pat on the back for consistently achieving Delayed Onset Muscle Stress Syndrome (DOMS), a sign that a weight resistance program may be having an effect.

You should have been much more specific about the root causes of the pain. Tearing sensations, instability due to poor form, etc. are disasterous reasons for pain. However, lactic acid buildup from circuit training is not pain to be avoided, but indeed, relished.

 
At 2:05 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Agreed. The woman was a wimp. I don't particularly enjoy the effects of aerobics but I do them because I like the outcome. Weights are the same. As long as you're doing them carefully, with good form, and aren't having joint pain and such, you're going to get DOMS at times.

Some people...

 
At 6:27 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey guys...that's a little rude. There is a difference between being sore and experiencing pain. Let's hope she was just sore. I thought the advice was good although a little more attention should have been payed to the type of pain/soreness.

 
At 6:34 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I use my treadmill every day (7 days a week) for 90 min. & sometimes 2 hours per day. I do break it up, however, 1 in the AM & 1 in the PM. My husband thinks this is too much exercise. Is he right? I don't run, but do walk a mod-fast pace (4.2mph)& alternate inclines. Can someone advise? I don't feel any pain...Thank you!

 
At 10:04 PM, Anonymous Tanya said...

What is 'too much' totally depends on you and how you feel. You don't sound like it's a problem - and you said you feel no pain, and you're walking, so this seems fine to me. Of course - if you're anorexic - tha's another story.

 
At 11:11 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks Tonya! I don't think it's too much exercise either, & no I am not anorexic or bulimic. My family has a history of diabetes & heart disease & for years I've been trying to not allow myself to have those troubles so I exercise. Have a great day!

 
At 6:57 PM, Blogger Linda Kravitz said...

I am entertained by the comments to my article. As the author and co-founder of http://www.TheFitWoman.com/ I can say that women feel intensity in different ways then men. In addition, women have cultural barriers to getting that "muscle pump" which excites so many men. After all, it is hot feminine. Yes, if that is your definition of wimp - then so be it.

The idea of the article is to "trick" women into giving it their all when it comes to stimulating their muscles. If increasing the weight of the resistance scares them - then we can do it in other ways that does not scare women.

By the way, Jamie, please change our URL to http://www.thefitwoman.com. Thank you. Linda Kravitz - CEO, TheFitWoman.com.

 
At 7:05 PM, Blogger Linda Kravitz said...

As the author of this posting, I am quite amused by the comments. Yes, we woman are wimps. And we need to be "tricked" into intensity. Many woman get scared that they will no longer be feminine if they pick up a weight larger than 10 lbs.

Until the cultural barriers against women pumping iron are dissolved, I'm afraid we have to resort to manipulation.

By the way, Jamie, our URL is no longer thefitwomanonline - please change it to our new and improved url:

http://www.thefitwoman.com/

Thank you. Linda

 
At 10:49 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Okay. Since I don't want to be a "wimp", & I really want an awesome bod....how much weight should I lift? Dare I say: "I am afraid to become big", but I'd love to be athletic-looking with definition! Help!!

 

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