Fernando300
Registered
Im curious forum...do I needto take a week off? say after lifting 6-8 weeks is it necessary to take a week off? appreciate all responses thanks
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I deload once a month (three weeks of training followed by a week long deload) and I'd recommend that frequency.
I certainly do not know your client demographics however I do know that the majority of lifters are not experienced lifters. Inexperienced lifters don't know what to 'listen' for.As a Personal Trainer I advise my clients to listen to their own bodies because everyone is different and their training intensities differ.
If your energy is down or you are having trouble sleeping or your eating habits change you should probably take a break.
LOL at the capitalization of personal trainer....the majority of people you'll train as a personal trainer dont know jack about "listening to their own bodies". You're better off telling them what signs to look for.As a Personal Trainer I advise my clients to listen to their own bodies because everyone is different and their training intensities differ. If your energy is down or you are having trouble sleeping or your eating habits change you should probably take a break. Hope that helps
Weeks of are for pussies and people with AIDS... just put a band aid on your vagina and keep pumping!!
I certainly do not know your client demographics however I do know that the majority of lifters are not experienced lifters. Inexperienced lifters don't know what to 'listen' for.
That's fine advice. However, training up to the point of being in an overtrained state does not facilitate efficient maximization of potential. By the time symptoms of overtraining noticeably manifest, the lifter has already been in a suboptimal state for a substantial period of time. The period of time is not only time wasted, but it is time spent going in the opposite direction of the goal. The body simply will not 'positively' react to the training stimulus during the interval of time preceding the manifestation of those overtraining symptoms. Instead, the body will take the opposite reaction to the training and 'break down'. Once the body is 'breaking down', the overtraining symptoms present themselves.
This can be avoided by implementing scheduled deloads.
A note: one does not need to incorporate deloads to get strong -- plenty of guys have gotten strong without them. However, insufficient deloads invariably come with the cost of an increase in injury rate as well as a serving as an overall inefficiency in programming.
Exactly what I was going to say. Listen to your body and dont workout if you are sick.As a Personal Trainer I advise my clients to listen to their own bodies because everyone is different and their training intensities differ. If your energy is down or you are having trouble sleeping or your eating habits change you should probably take a break. Hope that helps
Weeks of are for pussies and people with AIDS... just put a band aid on your vagina and keep pumping!!
The best thing to do, IMO, is to plan things out so that a) you're not training to the point that you can't recover and b) you allow yourself a de-load week about once every month. It doesn't have to be a complete week off, but you need to drop total volume and/or intensity significantly and give your body a chance to recover a bit.
I know Jim Wendler always says that the best way to get strong is to leave a little bit in the tank. I tend to agree with that statement.
The best thing to do, IMO, is to plan things out so that a) you're not training to the point that you can't recover and b) you allow yourself a de-load week about once every month. It doesn't have to be a complete week off, but you need to drop total volume and/or intensity significantly and give your body a chance to recover a bit.
I know Jim Wendler always says that the best way to get strong is to leave a little bit in the tank. I tend to agree with that statement.
As a Personal Trainer I advise my clients to listen to their own bodies because everyone is different and their training intensities differ. If your energy is down or you are having trouble sleeping or your eating habits change you should probably take a break. Hope that helps
Hey you fucking spammer, you forgot your link
Jeffrey7133.eliteweightlosspackage.com
I know the feeling, but the rest will benefit in the long termI listen to my body and whatever my daily schedule allows. If I'm nursing an injury then I'm prone to take days or a full week off. But I'm a gym rat so it bugs the heck out of me not to be lifting.
I certainly do not know your client demographics however I do know that the majority of lifters are not experienced lifters. Inexperienced lifters don't know what to 'listen' for.
That's fine advice. However, training up to the point of being in an overtrained state does not facilitate efficient maximization of potential. By the time symptoms of overtraining noticeably manifest, the lifter has already been in a suboptimal state for a substantial period of time. The period of time is not only time wasted, but it is time spent going in the opposite direction of the goal. The body simply will not 'positively' react to the training stimulus during the interval of time preceding the manifestation of those overtraining symptoms. Instead, the body will take the opposite reaction to the training and 'break down'. Once the body is 'breaking down', the overtraining symptoms present themselves.
This can be avoided by implementing scheduled deloads.
A note: one does not need to incorporate deloads to get strong -- plenty of guys have gotten strong without them. However, insufficient deloads invariably come with the cost of an increase in injury rate as well as a serving as an overall inefficiency in programming.
Weeks of are for pussies and people with AIDS... just put a band aid on your vagina and keep pumping!!
the big vagina band isle in PathMark.Where does one find a ban aid for a really big vagina?
right by the giant dousche
Im curious forum...do I needto take a week off? say after lifting 6-8 weeks is it necessary to take a week off? appreciate all responses thanks