By Chris Collins on Thursday, 17 February 2011
Category: Fitness

What Defines a Productive Workout?

How do you determine if you've had a good workout or not? Is it something objective such as lifting a certain amount of weight, covering a distance in a certain amount of time or something else? Maybe I'm getting ahead of myself. It might be that some people simply see getting exercise or doing a workout as something to cross off a list. And there's nothing wrong with that. Unless you have specific goals and want to have the best health possible. Then it's important to be tracking your workouts. And making both subjective and objective notations in your journal. And this is as well as how you feel the days after your workout should determine whether or not you had an effective workout. Because I'm seeing something developing that is a little bit discouraging. And it involves people getting excited about painful, overly intense workouts. Now don't get me wrong. I'm all for intense training. Athletes will bond when they go through a tough physical challenge together. I want everyone I work with to lift as intensely as is possible for them. And I want them to feel like they could repeat the same workout the next day. But that's not what seems to be happening in fitness circles these days. People are posting on their fb walls about how 'yesterday's workout killed them!' and 'how they are still sore from the last workout!'. There is even a 'fitness' style that gives you a t-shirt with their clown caricature on it for throwing up during a workout. Some of you may know which style this is.

Anybody else see anything wrong with this picture? This is not the goal. This is not what you should be shooting for. The goal should be to stimulate and not annihilate the neuromuscular system. On occasion it does happen that you will have some lingering muscle soreness. This is aka doms for delayed onset muscle soreness. And as a younger guy working out I craved doms. I figured that unless I had trouble walking down stairs after a squat workout I hadn't trained hard enough. Or unless it hurt to be poked in the chest after a bench workout I had wasted my time. Boy was I wrong! A friend and colleague, Mike Boyle, has a great saying for training this way. (another friend reminded me of this quote) Mike said 'I could beat you with a baseball bat and make you good and sore and not much else'. Soreness is not the end goal. Results are. More is not always better. More efficiency is better. Over the past few months I have been experiementing with a new training style to reduce doms and increase results. And the results are amazing. So I've slowly been introducing this new approach to the people I've been working with for a while. And guess what? They are all setting new personal bests on all of their lifts. With less work. And no pain, discomfort or restriction the days after. For mylself here's what I've accomplished since the new year. All increases are based on a mathematical model. True values will be established by March 1 when I test all my lifts again. Bench +30 lbs Squat +40 lbs Deadlift +45 lbs So I'm curious to know? How do you measure a successful workout? Leave your comments in the space below and I promise to reply to each one. Chris                                                                                                                                                                                       okanaganpeakperformance.com 'always moving forward' 

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