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The Top 10 Bonehead Workout
Mistakes To Avoid By Tom Venuto
“Common workout mistakes” has always been a
very popular topic in fitness publications. But no matter how many times
this subject is re-hashed, you almost always hear about the same half a
dozen or so mistakes, including poor form, overtraining, going too heavy,
not stretching, not warming up, yadda, yadda yadda. Ironically, you seldom
hear about the biggest mistakes of all. I call these humongous bloopers
“bonehead mistakes” because once you start to analyze and think about them,
it's really just common sense and it all seems so obvious… except of course
to the person doing it… who is often quite oblivious until someone else
points it out to them... then the light goes on and it's like... "Doh!"
Before I begin the countdown, (in no particular order),
there’s one more gripe I have about the treatment this subject has been
given in the past: Most of the attention has been put on the mistakes, but
very little on the solutions. It’s all too easy to point fingers and say,
“Don’t do that” and “Shame on you, dummy” but only 1% of your time should be
spent on problems. 99% should be spent on solutions. So in that spirit,
after I bring each mistake to your attention, I’ll give you a
solution-oriented training tip to help you avoid boneheadedness and join the
elite group who “kick butt” in the gym at every workout…
Bonehead workout mistake #1: "Winging it"
“Winging it” means having no written goals or plans, no training journal
and no way of “keeping score.” It’s when you just show up at the gym day
after day and do whatever strikes your fancy, whatever machine happens to be
available, or whatever you’ve become habitually accustomed to doing. Winging
it is when you don’t know where you are, where you’re going or how you’re
going to get there - but you start your journey anyway – no compass, no
roadmap. It’s been said that “Action without planning is the biggest cause
of failure,” and I believe that statement is 100% accurate.
Kick butt workout tip #1: Develop a strategic plan
Successful people
never “wing it,” they always have a plan. Strategic planning is a never
ending process and includes: Assessment (where am I now?), goal setting
(where do I want to go?), creating a plan or strategy (How will I get where
I want to go?), executing the plan (what action steps must I take daily to
reach my
goal?), and measuring results (how will I know if I’m moving towards my
goal and how will I know when I’ve reached it?). Boneheads “wing it.”
Butt–kickers have a master plan and goals for every workout.
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Bonehead workout mistake #2: Repeating the same workouts… without
progressive overload
In one respect, repeating the same workouts is
important – it’s called “continuity.” Continuity means that to experience an
adaptive response (more muscle, more strength, less fat and all that other
good stuff), you must repeat a certain modality or exercise consistently
over a long enough period of time to allow the adaptive response to occur
and to reap the full benefits (rather than changing exercises at every
workout). That type of repetition is good. The bonehead mistake is when you
do the same exercises, same reps, same weight, same everything, week after
week, without ever challenging yourself to do more than you’ve done before.
If your muscles could talk they would say, “Yawn…. Did that, done that, been
there… we’re just going to stay exactly the way we are… no need to get
bigger or stronger today.”
Kick butt workout tip #2: Strive to beat
your previous workouts
Muscle growth and strength increases occur
when you place demands on your body above and beyond what it has experienced
in the past. Your body responds to this progressive overload by getting
stronger in order to handle this type of demand in the future. Your
objective at almost every workout is to set goals to beat what you did
during the previous one. If you can’t add more weight, it could be as simple
as one more rep with the same weight or the same sets/reps/weight in less
time. It could also mean one more minute of cardio, one level higher on a
stairclimber, or half a percent steeper incline on the treadmill. Continuous
and never-ending improvement is the name of the game.
- - - - -
Bonehead workout mistake #3: Starving yourself
A calorie deficit is
the only way to lose body fat. However, the caloric deficit must be kept
small. When calories are cut too much, or held too low for too long, your
body thinks you are starving and sets into motion a series of metabolic and
hormonal events, which ultimately result in muscle loss, slow metabolism and
plateaus. Your body is like a power plant or furnace and when you don’t feed
the fire, your metabolic flame dwindles to a flicker, producing less heat
and less energy. That’s why not eating enough is one of the biggest mistakes
of all. As Charlie Remington likes to say, “Food is not your problem, food
is your solution”
Kick butt workout tip #3: Eat more, burn more
Did it ever occur to you that if you exercise more you can eat more? And
that this is a more effective fat loss strategy than eating less and
exercising less? To lose body fat, you must create a calorie deficit. A
deficit can be created by exercising more, eating less, or ideally, with a
combination of both. The best combination of all is a small decrease in
calories accompanied by a large increase in activity. Think about it:
Decreasing calories slows your metabolism. Increasing calories increases
your metabolism. Exercise increases your metabolism. Therefore, eat more,
exercise more = double increase in metabolism. Eat less, don’t exercise =
double decrease in metabolism. Yes, starving is for boneheads.
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Bonehead workout mistake #4: Skipping scheduled workouts
A
great body doesn’t happen overnight. Successful body transformation is the
cumulative result of dozens or even hundreds of successful workouts. Each
workout brings you one small step closer to your goal. Each workout missed
takes you one small step backwards. Most people underestimate the cumulative
effect of each small step. They figure that “It just doesn’t matter… it’s
only one workout.” If you don’t think that one little workout matters, then
think about the humble termite; they’re such itty bitty little creatures and
they take such itty bitty little bites, yet when enough little bites are
taken, an entire building can come crumbling down.
Kick butt workout
tip #4: Be disciplined and consistent
Not only do you slip backwards
physically when you skip even one scheduled workout, perhaps more
devastating is the effect on your mind and character. Every time you
successfully complete a scheduled workout, you build your discipline and
self esteem. When your self esteem increases, it makes you feel good and
that stimulates a positive self-reinforcing cycle of even more discipline,
confidence and action. Everything you do helps or hurts. Every workout
counts. Treat your word as law. When you say you’re going to work out...
WORK OUT!
Workout Tips Continued > > >
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