Squats questions
May. 10th, 2004 09:28 amSo, yesterday I did almost exactly the squat workout recommended by
bluechromis :
12 reps @ 65 lb
10 reps @ 75
8 reps @ 85
6 reps @ 95
12 reps @ 75 <-- (pssst--I only did 10 of these, that was the almost).
12 reps of another more specific quad excercise (slow quad extensions at 50 lb.)
, and I did them first thing. God, there's nothing to suck the joy out of the first half of a workout like that. :b I seriously might have to start splitting into Squat/Quads Day and Everything Else Day. Anyway, I need some advice because now my lower back is way more sore than I like. It happened last week too, and lasted until Weds or so... it feels like normal muscular stiffness rather than something being messed up in a bad way, but it's pretty uncomfortable. Plus, there is some chance it is something bad--am I perhaps sticking my butt out too much instead of keeping my pelvis tucked when I'm squatting down (I was trying not to, but...)? And if I hypothetically did that, would it stress my lower back in a bad way and cause trouble? Some sites actually say to keep your lower back arched, but my trainer said to keep it straight, and that sounds better to me intuitively.
Also, if this is just muscular stiffness, but then the question is whether squats themselves, once a week, are going to strengthen the offending bits or whether I should be doing some other lower-back exercises on Thursdays to help get them up to speed. Any advice/experience would be appreciated. :)
12 reps @ 65 lb
10 reps @ 75
8 reps @ 85
6 reps @ 95
12 reps @ 75 <-- (pssst--I only did 10 of these, that was the almost).
12 reps of another more specific quad excercise (slow quad extensions at 50 lb.)
, and I did them first thing. God, there's nothing to suck the joy out of the first half of a workout like that. :b I seriously might have to start splitting into Squat/Quads Day and Everything Else Day. Anyway, I need some advice because now my lower back is way more sore than I like. It happened last week too, and lasted until Weds or so... it feels like normal muscular stiffness rather than something being messed up in a bad way, but it's pretty uncomfortable. Plus, there is some chance it is something bad--am I perhaps sticking my butt out too much instead of keeping my pelvis tucked when I'm squatting down (I was trying not to, but...)? And if I hypothetically did that, would it stress my lower back in a bad way and cause trouble? Some sites actually say to keep your lower back arched, but my trainer said to keep it straight, and that sounds better to me intuitively.
Also, if this is just muscular stiffness, but then the question is whether squats themselves, once a week, are going to strengthen the offending bits or whether I should be doing some other lower-back exercises on Thursdays to help get them up to speed. Any advice/experience would be appreciated. :)
no subject
Date: 2004-05-10 12:51 pm (UTC)I wish this were an ideal world schedule-wise. And that I were figuring this out faster. But, pretty much with anything physical I need a lot of time. I've been doing my legs for a year now--long enough to see some results but not enough to really consider myself to have figured it out. After skating (you're still crappy after a year), TKD (a year will get you stuck at green belt, w00t) and even upper-body lifting (I felt good but was not lifting today's kind of weight), well, that's no surprise to me.
I'll try switching up my schedule--the only question is how well Saturday morning upper body is going to go over in combination with TKD. I think it could work as long as there's a break between. I'll let y'all know. :)
my $0.02
Date: 2004-05-10 05:45 pm (UTC)I would never advise doing upper and lower body in the same workout - not even on the same day, but sometimes life happens and same day is necessary. In that case I would say make sure you have several hours between eg: do upper early in the morning and lower in the evening. That's probably not terribly convenient either. You run the risk of systemic exhaustion when you do everything together - 'specially now that you are doing squats. You're really working those big leg muscles hard and there's a lot of cooperation and support happening from lots of other muscles in your body.
In the end, tho', you have to do what works for you. Have you read what Krista (http://www.stumptuous.com/weights.html) has to say about modifications women can make to squats? Click on 'women stuff' then 'feminine problems'. Follow her other links and read what else she has to say about squatting. You may have done this already.
I know I'm rambling a bit but I have a couple of other things I've been wanting to say to you.
I love this photo of your back. It looks fabulous!
You asked for thoughts on plateaus a while back. I didn't have time to comment back then. I'll copy an excerpt from Experts' Weight Loss Guide: For Doctors, Health Professionals...and All Those Serious about Their Health (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1865085774/qid=1084235344/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/102-7480518-5380908?v=glance&s=books).
"Physiological adjustments to changes in energy balance...mean that plateaus in the weight loss process are natural and to be expected." "Consolidation of weight loss by maintaining a plateau after 3-6 months of losses should be a key focus of any weight-loss program. This allows the body to adjust to a new settling point based on a new level of energy balance, and hence reduces the risk of reactive weight regain."
I think that you can substitute 'strength gains' for 'weight loss' in the above statement. The plateau gives your metabolism time to adapt to the change of energy balance due to fat loss or muscle gain (or both). Any weight loss program requires maintenance for at least 12 months before it can be considered successful. A plateau encourages maintenance. "...in light of the fact that the normal progression in modern populations is an increase in weight, 'not gaining is winning'."
Re: my $0.02
Date: 2004-05-12 06:13 am (UTC)Yeah, there is no way in the world I could do them both together. Even contemplating it makes me dizzy.
That was a really interesting bit about plateaus. Mentally, in the past, I have had a really hard time with plateaus. This year, my main fitness/body goal is consistency. Finding the right balance of pushing myself as hard as I can without burning myself out. And sometimes that will probably mean just holding steady or even pulling back sometimes. This is much more of a mental growth process than a physical one. So thanks for posting that link :)
Oh, and yes, isn't that back photo nifty! She's a studette.
Re: my $0.02
Date: 2004-05-12 06:38 am (UTC)I do want to get my legs stronger, because I know it's helping a lot with TKD injury prevention, so I have to increase weight sometime-- but I did got more sore this week than I really associate with normal, healthy growth in strength. So I intend to hold at the same weight and move other exercises off to a different day (oh, and take my glutamine right away instead of forgetting for 12 hours). When it feels better, and not before, I'll think again of increasing. No worries about ego, see, at least not on the legs. My back now... and what did you do, you just fed the ego. ;) Thanks on the picture, anyway. Thanks for the stumptuous link too--I'd read it before, but not for quite a while. Too long, probably. I will try the wider stance with no weight and see how it feels.