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The inside-scoop on Diet, Exercise, Nutrition and Training for People Who Are Passionate About Fitness
Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS) | Preventing & Treating DOMS
December 14, 2008 on 12:47 pm | By Matt | In Exercise | 1 CommentMuscle soreness after exercise can put a real kink in your training. Find out what DOMS is, how to prevent it and what you can do to ease delayed onset muscle soreness if you get it.
Nearly anyone who works out regularly has experienced sore muscles after exercise. Sometimes you’ll feel it later
that night, or the next morning … and in some cases, you may actually think you’re out-of-the-woods, only to wake up two days later with stiff, tender muscles that feel as tight as rubber bands.
It’s known as Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (also called “DOMS”), and it’s both loved and reviled by exercise fanatics. Loved, because many people view DOMS as a sign that yesterday’s workout was effective, but hated at the same time because in severe cases, Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness can prevent you from comfortably hitting the gym again.
And in the case of calf muscle soreness — which plagues runners as often as weight lifters — it can literally make going down a flight stairs in the morning a three minute ordeal.
Symptoms of Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness
You probably have a case of Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness if you experience any of the following symptoms:
- Muscle tenderness
- Muscle soreness
- Stiffness
- Swelling
- Pain
- Loss of mobility or reduced range of motion
- Muscle tenderness, including when the muscle belly is pressed with the fingers
- Loss of strength
- Acute muscle twitches or spams
The extent and duration of these symptoms may vary from person-to-person and are largely dependent on the amount of resistance — especially eccentric resistance — placed on the muscles during exercise.
Continue reading Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS) | Preventing & Treating DOMS…
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Weight Training Basics: The Four Principles of Weight Training
March 31, 2008 on 9:09 pm | By Matt | In Exercise, Weight & Resistance Training | 6 CommentsLearn the basics of weight training and start burning more fat, increase your strength and get more fit than ever before.
The research is in: Including weight or resistance training into your weekly workout makes good health and fitness sense, regardless of your level of experience.
You know the benefits of weight training, so now it’s just a matter of doing it.
But before you hit the weights, you should take a few minutes to understand the key principles to effective weight and resistance training. Having knowledge of these tried-and-true rules of weight training will ensure that you make progress in the gym, no matter what your individual health and fitness goals may be. 
There is a lot of jargon thrown around by fitness trainers and gym-goers that you need to understand. Sometimes it can seem like a foreign language, but once it’s been explained in plain language (we like to call this “gumping things” at the office), it will make all of the sense in the world.
The Basics of Weight Training: What You Need to Know To Get Started
Okay, so you’re convinced you need to start including weight training in your workout routine.
Great. Now where do you begin?
Let’s start with the four basic principles of weight training:
- Overload: This just means you expose your muscles to more weight, resistance or stimulus than they are used to performing during your normal every day activities. To do this, you need to lift an amount of weight that only allows you to complete the intended amount of repetitions. Remember, your overload weight will increase as you continue training and your body recovers and adapts. Which takes us to the next concept, progression.
- Progression: Progression means that you continually overload your muscle with more stimulus each time you weight train. Since your muscles are constantly adapting, you will never get stronger without increasing the force they have to exert or the amount of work they do. Progression doesn’t necessarily always mean adding additional weight. You can overload the muscle progressively in a number of different ways, including performing more reps with the same weight, increasing the volume (total number) of sets performed, changing the tempo or pace of your repetitions to keep the muscle under tension for longer periods of time, or simply lifting more weight than last time. The key here is to always push your muscles harder than the last workout in some fashion.
- Specificity: Specificity is a fancy term for performing weight training with a specific and distinct goal in mind. So if your goal is to add additional muscle mass, your choice of exercises, repetitions, sets and weight used will be different than if you are training your muscles for endurance. Know your goals before you start weight training, since it will impact how workout routine.
- Rest and Recovery: There is a common saying that muscle is built outside of the gym, not in it. Weight training stresses your muscles and requires that you allow yourself adequate rest and recovery time. Typically that will mean giving your muscles 48 hours to recover before training that same muscle or group of muscles again. Understand that recovery time is highly individual. Some advanced trainees need less recovery time than beginners. And the intensity of your weight training will in large part determine the length of rest that’s right for you.
Next up, we’ll learn about choosing the appropriate weight, repetitions (reps), and sets to meet your goals.
As always, you should consult your physician before undertaking any resistance, weight or cardio training program.
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Principles of Weight Training | Fitness and Exercise Glossary
March 30, 2008 on 9:05 pm | By Matt | In Fitness, Health & Exercise Glossary | No CommentsThere are four basic principles of weight training:
These principles work together to ensure that a person meets their weight training goals.
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Rest and Recovery (Principles of Weight Training) | Fitness and Exercise Glossary
March 30, 2008 on 9:01 pm | By Matt | In Fitness, Health & Exercise Glossary | No CommentsRest and recovery is the fourth principle of weight training. It says that each muscle requires adequate time to rest and recover between workouts.
The actual duration of the rest and recovery period may vary from individual-to-individual based on factors like their current physical condition, prior weight training experience, diet, and the intensity and volume of their training.
A good rule of thumb is to provide 48 hours of rest and recovery time before working the same muscle again.
Also see: principles of weight training
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