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Not lifting enough weight

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posted by shortz
This is pretty obvious for most of us, but hopefully some new lifters/noobs will read this.

Study: Weightlifters Don't Lift Enough
Study Says Many Weightlifters Don't Pump Enough Iron to Get Any Benefit at All

The Associated Press

Sept. 14, 2004 — It might be time for workout warriors to stack a couple more weight plates onto the pile. A recent study showed that many inexperienced weightlifters don't come close to pumping enough iron to change the shape of their muscles, or really get any benefit at all.
The study, done by exercise physiology professor Stephen Glass of Grand Valley State University in Michigan, was based in part on previous research that said people must lift no less than 60 percent of the maximum weight they can lift to increase the size of their muscles.

In a test Glass conducted involving 30 novice weightlifters 17 men and 13 women not a single person chose to start at the 60 percent mark.

"When it comes to strength training, people need to know what is heavy and what's not," Glass said.

Glass did a similar study a few years ago involving aerobic exercise and learned that most participants were able to find a starting point at which the exercise would be beneficial. It was because things like walking, riding bikes and climbing stairs are common, and most people can tell what the difference is between light, medium and heavy aerobic exercise.

Lifting weights is not the same thing. Most people don't do that during a normal day, so when they hit the weight room, they have no idea what to expect.

"If you lift 50 percent of what you can, that may feel moderately difficult," Glass said. "But people don't realize it's not near the weight you need to lift to induce gains."

In the study, Glass asked the participants to simply choose a good starting point and work out however they wanted. A little after the starting point had been chosen, the participants were asked to lift as much weight as they possibly could to determine their maximum.

By crunching those numbers, Glass found that nobody picked the 60 percent number that has been cited as the point at which lifting weights starts to work.

Likewise, most novice weightlifters didn't understand that maxing out slowly increasing the weight until they're lifting the most they possibly can is the way to get the most benefit from the workout.

"The intent is to lift to fatigue," he said. "Fatigue means you pick up heavy weight and you lift it until you can't lift it anymore. That's not the perception most people have in their day-to-day activities."

The result, the study concluded, is that it "appears that individuals are unable to select an appropriate weight that will provide them with any benefits of weight training, and as a result, may be more likely to become discouraged and quit."

Some skeptics of Glass' research might say that novices lifting too heavy are naturally more prone to injury. Glass said studies showed most injuries among beginners come when they try to max out early during a workout.

One of the recommendations learned from the study, published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, is that beginners should ask trainers to help them figure out what they should be lifting.

http://www.abcnews.go.com/wire/US/ap20040914_1289.html (also posted by smackaveli at MM)

posted by Smallguy
good article

I know personally I start with a wieght I can get 10-12 reps with so it is pretty light and work up until I get to there I can only lift the weight 2-4 times

Smallguy

posted by antihero
since im considered a newbie (only been lifting a few years), i'll keep that in mind and try throwing more plates on.

posted by shortz
Before anyone jumps to conclusions, be sure you know the point of th article. Taking DBs and pressing them for 10 times without getting fatigued is what they are refering to. You should be fatigued at that 10th, 8th or even 5th rep, but with good form. The article is simply saying, if you are not fatigued, man up and put some more weight on that bar so that you can break a sweat doing it. Just don't hurt yourself.

posted by robdog
Good article. I train as heavy as i can but ultra strict.

I also have friends who dont even know what there max lifts are because some of the weights they lift are light but they have a fantastic physique. To be honest in my opinion it comes down to intensity and feeling the muscle you are working that gives the best results.

Mix it up is what works best for me. I do heavy low reps on compound movements and light high intensity/volume reps on isolation movements.

posted by Fez
They should really teach people how to work out before joining a gym.

Some of the exercises i've seen some people do........i dont know how they havent hurt themselves yet.

posted by serious newbie
If you don't go to failure, you don't really know what you can do. Most people don't even know what 60% is because they don't know what 100% is.

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