Corsair
Registered
Right, brief little spiel about me.
I'm tiny - and fully grown at 21 I'm sure. I'm 5'7, and 130 pounds soaking wet. To give you an idea of how small my bone structure is, the circumference of wrist - not diameter *circumference* is barely 6 inches. I've met 13 year old girls with bigger bone structure than me. As a result, there isn't a heck of a lot of room for muscle to be decked on - any gain at all for me is more or less fighting an extreme uphill battle - so, as a result, I train more for definition to my physique, rather than pure strength or size - I've more or less accepted neither is really worth the extreme efforts I personally would have to put myself through.
So, and forgive me if this is covered elsewhere, is there really such a thing as definition training? I've always heard "lower weights, more reps", but this has been countered by many sites and trainers I've talked to who say it does nothing special. And what would lower constitute? 50% of max? 75%?
All I know is that for some reason, I feel more of a "burn" if you will after an exercise, as well as the day after, if I use lighter weights, and more reps. Though whether this really does anything for me, I have no idea.
If I use weights that are heavy for me, (say curling 40 or 45 pound dumbells with proper posture for example) I feel less of a burn (heavy weight 4-6 reps). I can at most manage 10 reps the first set, maybe 6 or 7 the second, and I'm lucky to get to 5 on the third with challenging weights. I know for heavies you should try for 4-6, so maybe I just shouldn't push to 10 on the first try. At any rate, it "feels" like I'm getting less impact for my effort, though this could just be perception.
To make an already long story short, (sorry) what would be the most effective way to simply tone and define my muscles? Special exercises? Does the low-weight high-rep thing really work? Or should I just keep maxing my weight, even though I can't even complete three full sets?
I'm an ice hockey goalie, not a boxer, so strength and size aren't the most important to me - though if there was something that could help me there that I'm not doing, I'd give it a shot (and yes, I've tried higher calorie proper nutrition, and creatine - no luck. Proper nutrition actually made me just plain gain unneccesary weight, and creatine just made me piss all day)
Base line - defintion - how do I go for that?
Thanks for taking the time on this one!
I'm tiny - and fully grown at 21 I'm sure. I'm 5'7, and 130 pounds soaking wet. To give you an idea of how small my bone structure is, the circumference of wrist - not diameter *circumference* is barely 6 inches. I've met 13 year old girls with bigger bone structure than me. As a result, there isn't a heck of a lot of room for muscle to be decked on - any gain at all for me is more or less fighting an extreme uphill battle - so, as a result, I train more for definition to my physique, rather than pure strength or size - I've more or less accepted neither is really worth the extreme efforts I personally would have to put myself through.
So, and forgive me if this is covered elsewhere, is there really such a thing as definition training? I've always heard "lower weights, more reps", but this has been countered by many sites and trainers I've talked to who say it does nothing special. And what would lower constitute? 50% of max? 75%?
All I know is that for some reason, I feel more of a "burn" if you will after an exercise, as well as the day after, if I use lighter weights, and more reps. Though whether this really does anything for me, I have no idea.
If I use weights that are heavy for me, (say curling 40 or 45 pound dumbells with proper posture for example) I feel less of a burn (heavy weight 4-6 reps). I can at most manage 10 reps the first set, maybe 6 or 7 the second, and I'm lucky to get to 5 on the third with challenging weights. I know for heavies you should try for 4-6, so maybe I just shouldn't push to 10 on the first try. At any rate, it "feels" like I'm getting less impact for my effort, though this could just be perception.
To make an already long story short, (sorry) what would be the most effective way to simply tone and define my muscles? Special exercises? Does the low-weight high-rep thing really work? Or should I just keep maxing my weight, even though I can't even complete three full sets?
I'm an ice hockey goalie, not a boxer, so strength and size aren't the most important to me - though if there was something that could help me there that I'm not doing, I'd give it a shot (and yes, I've tried higher calorie proper nutrition, and creatine - no luck. Proper nutrition actually made me just plain gain unneccesary weight, and creatine just made me piss all day)
Base line - defintion - how do I go for that?
Thanks for taking the time on this one!