I have never done this before. Most of the time, I get people in their 20-40s, once in a blue moon I get people hitting 50. Today, I had a 64 year old client come in and say that she wanted to lose weight. I took a fitness assessment. Her bodyfat was in the 45% range. She weighed almost 230 lbs. She said she wasn't afraid of doing free weights, and would listen to anything I'd say. She's committed.
Here's my problem: I'm thinking of using compound lifts with her with both a Smith Machine and some free weight work, a full body routine 3x weekly, 2-3 sets of 8-12 reps for each bodypart, with a heavy emphasis (about 4x a week) on low impact treadmill walking at 60% of her heart rate. I'm thinking, make it as basic as possible, recruit as many muscle fibers as possible, and don't make it too complicated. Thought I'd start her out with 3-4 weeks of two day weight training sessions during the week, but keeping the cardio constant. Then, after taking her through the fourth week, take her to 3x a week and continue from there.
Would this help her achieve these goals? Diet isnt an issue. She started and is on her second week of a doctor prescribed Atkins-type ketogenic diet.
Here's my problem: I'm thinking of using compound lifts with her with both a Smith Machine and some free weight work, a full body routine 3x weekly, 2-3 sets of 8-12 reps for each bodypart, with a heavy emphasis (about 4x a week) on low impact treadmill walking at 60% of her heart rate. I'm thinking, make it as basic as possible, recruit as many muscle fibers as possible, and don't make it too complicated. Thought I'd start her out with 3-4 weeks of two day weight training sessions during the week, but keeping the cardio constant. Then, after taking her through the fourth week, take her to 3x a week and continue from there.
Would this help her achieve these goals? Diet isnt an issue. She started and is on her second week of a doctor prescribed Atkins-type ketogenic diet.