Well it finally happened, I tore my MCL on my other knee now, and experiencing the same swelling, knee locking up, and all around shittyness like my other knee MCL. At least I know what to expect now.
Fuck my knees.
Well it finally happened, I tore my MCL on my other knee now, and experiencing the same swelling, knee locking up, and all around shittyness like my other knee MCL. At least I know what to expect now.
Fuck my knees.
Dear runners,
I don't know where to run. For right now I'm in a good spot, I can run at home around my neighborhood. But I'm moving into the dorms in less than a month and I don't know where to go to run. Where do people run outside of neighborhoods? Serious question. I have no idea.
Sincerely,
This guy
Hmm, I guess running on roads never occurred to me.
hey it's that girl who wanted a better butt or something i think
i remember you
what's up?
anyway what are you comparing the free weights to, machines? yoga? body weight exercises? staring at the swedish bodybuilders? (just checking)
basically, here is why free weights are better than machines:
1) you're balancing the weight yourself. more muscle usage = more muscle gained. stabilizers getting used so you're going to be able to apply your strength in the real world.
2)functional strength. sort of mentioned this. what's going to occur more in the real world? you pushing something with your own arms and muscle, or you having something hold what you're pushing steady for you while you push it? probably the first.
3)i'd have to look up more reasons than i know off the top of my head, but this one should pretty much cover the cake for you
how many people have you seen who are renown for strength and use machines? how many people have you seen who look great and you ask them what they do at the gym and they say 'machines'? they might say cardio or yoga, but usually you'll get something like dumbbells / barbell work.
honestly the reason there are machines in gyms isn't because they do anything better. i mean yeah, lat pulldown machine is going to help you target your lats but seriously who does that? machines are there for convience. when going to the gym became something everyone did machines were invented because it was easy, simple, and quick. you didn't have to learn form, the machine did the form work for you. you didn't have to spend a lot of time because it was easier to do. they were invented for working people who still wanted to go to the gym. they'll burn your calories but won't bring strength as much as free weights will.
Ultimately, though, it's going to come down to what you want. Maybe you're not the better butt girl, I honestly can't remember. But you surely have a goal or you wouldn't be in the gym. Right now I'm almost a month off of lifting because I haven't had a goal or reason to be there. It's something I'm not proud to say but I lost a lot of motivation for being in the gym and just up and quit.
So first, define your goal. You wanna be strong? Compound lifts will take you there. You wanna be toned? Using free weights will accelerate your progress. You wanna lose weight? More muscle = more calories burned. There is hardly a goal that lifting weights will not accelerate you toward.
The big advantage comes in how they do it. I could write a graduate thesis on the benefits of free weights to the body. But I'll leave it as this: using weights will make you overall healthier more quickly and efficiently than anything else. It just comes down to making sure you're doing it safely.
And if you need tutorials or help, sup we're the #lifting thread and we can do that.
gg wp pce gotta go eat so i can get to 220 lbs already
Honestly the protein supplements are largely wasted, you're better off eating high protein foods like tuna, poultry, peanuts, etc. Supplements are not packaged in a way your body is designed to absorb so only a fraction of the nutrients actually get used. The rest you just poo down the toilet along with your money.
Honestly the protein supplements are largely wasted, you're better off eating high protein foods like tuna, poultry, peanuts, etc. Supplements are not packaged in a way your body is designed to absorb so only a fraction of the nutrients actually get used. The rest you just poo down the toilet along with your money.
Question for y'all - should I dedicate an entire workout day to abs and lower back? Or should I integrate abs and lower back into my other workouts so I can do them more often? Right now my regiment is kind of looking like this:
Day 1 - Chest, Shoulders, Upper Back
Day 2 - Bi's, Tri's, Forearms
Day 3 - Legs, Abs, Lower back
Day 4 - Rest
Day 5 - Chest, Shoulders, Upper back
Day 6 - Bi's, Tri's, Forearms
Day 7 - Rest* (Legs only once a week due to rehab regiment from torn PCL & ACL)
Should I change it up and just add abs to my workouts on days 1, 3, and 5? Or keep it as is? I can never remember if the abs need the same recovery time that the rest of my muscles do or not =/.
Do both sections of your back all in the one day. Please tell me that deadlifts are a part of your routine!
Are there any good no equipment (aka at home) workouts that I can find for free on the internet?
I live in the middle of nowhere so there isn't a gym. Right now I've been doing dips, sprints, situps, pushups, burpees. but i want something more structured since i'm not a personal trainer and i feel like im not working out everything.