Healthy Living

Saturday, November 7, 2009

3 reasons your workouts aren't working

Your time is valuable, and for each precious moment you put into your workouts, you want to ensure you get the best possible return on your investment. So, are you getting the results you want? If your body isn't as lean or toned as you'd like, it may be that you're committing some key training mistakes, which can sabotage the efforts of even veteran exercisers.

Of course, you probably know the more obvious mistakes to avoid. For instance, skipping your warm-up may cause you to fatigue early, preventing you from realizing your potential. Furthermore, leaning on the stair climber or elliptical trainer may allow you to stay on longer, but it drastically reduces the challenge to your lower body as well as the number of calories you burn. But what about the less obvious errors you may be making? Here, we'll discuss some of the more subtle -- yet no less serious -- faux pas of fitness and the strength-training exercises most frequently flubbed, and show you how they can be fixed with nearly effortless corrections.

THE TEN FAUX PAS OF FITNESS

People make small but costly mistakes when exercising every day, and one tiny change can have a huge impact on their results, says Los Angeles–based trainer Ken Alan, a spokesman for the American Council on Exercise. Thanks to Alan and the panel of training experts who weighed in on these faux pas and fixes, you'll error-proof your exercise and see tremendous payoffs, and the time you invest in your workouts will be smart and well-spent. We begin with five errors often made in your approach to exercise, then we'll take a look at five moves frequently flubbed.

THE APPROACH

1. The faux pas Getting married to your strength routine
The facts If you do the same routine over and over, your muscles will simply adapt; you're likely to hit a plateau because each exercise stimulates only a limited number of muscle fibers. However, if you challenge your muscles from a variety of angles by adding or alternating moves periodically, you'll get significantly more fibers into the act and develop more tone and strength.

The fix For each muscle group, learn an additional 2 or 3 exercises, trying new angles and equipment. (If you can't get instruction from a trainer, there are plenty of books and videos organized by routine for each body part.) For instance, if you usually do the dumbbell chest press on a flat bench, try it at an incline. If you normally use the chest-press machine, try the dumbbell chest press or the bench press with a barbell. Expand your repertoire enough so that you can change your entire routine every 6–8 weeks.

2. The faux pas Performing your reps too quickly
The facts If you zoom through your repetitions when strength training, you'll be using momentum instead of muscle power. You won't get the same stimulus for muscle building, and you won't burn as many calories. You'll also be more susceptible to training injuries such as torn muscles or connective tissue.

The fix Take 6 seconds to perform each repetition: 2 seconds to lift the weight and 4 seconds to lower it. (Since you have gravity to help you lower the weight, you need to slow down even more on this phase in order to give your muscles a sufficient challenge.) Our experts agree that slowing down is the single most significant change you can make to get better results from strength training.

3. The faux pas Exercising too hard, too often
The facts If you don't rest enough between hard cardio or strength workouts, you'll stop making progress and may even lose some of the fitness you've gained. You're also likely to burn out on exercise.

The fix To keep your muscles fresh and your motivation high, alternate shorter, tougher cardio workouts (for instance, 20 minutes) with longer, easier days (40–60 minutes). Don't go all-out more than twice a week. Keep in mind that the more intensely you train, the more time your body needs to recover. It's a good idea to do a couple of tough workouts and take 1 day completely off each week. On the strength-training front, take at least 1 day off between sessions that work the same muscle group.

7 more reasons your workout isn't working can be found here.

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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 229
  • S's Avatar
    Posted by S Tue Feb 17, 2009 8:29am PST

    "Exercising too hard, too often"

    Most of the women I see in the gym appear to exercise too little, not often enough, when it comes to strength training. They use weight that is too light for them and/or they focus on little muscles and ignore big ones, such as the woman I see who spends more time on the inner thigh machine then she does working her actual thighs, hamstrings or glutes.

    Report Abuse
  • Frenchy's Avatar
    Posted by Frenchy Wed Feb 18, 2009 8:22am PST

    Wanna lose weight? TURBO JAM IS AWESOME!

    Report Abuse
  • Jason's Avatar
    Posted by Jason Wed Feb 18, 2009 9:57am PST

    I have an idea....control your food intake as well!! Us americans eat like pigs getting fattened up for slaughter!!!

    The portions we eat could serve two or three people!! It is gross!!

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  • DeAnn's Avatar
    Posted by DeAnn Wed Feb 18, 2009 11:30am PST

    Funny, I've always gotten higher calorie burn readings on elipticals than treadmills - 50-100% higher!

    Report Abuse
  • ZaZa's Avatar
    Posted by ZaZa Wed Feb 18, 2009 12:11pm PST

    Daisy K, darling, you need to go to E Harmony!!! Anyway, it's all true, especially switching things up and the rest day thing. The switching keeps things interesting and keeps your body guessing...and the rest thing is imperative to performing well and staying strong!

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  • Lane's Avatar
    Posted by Lane Wed Feb 18, 2009 9:05pm PST

    Anyone have any info or storys about P90X ??? Been hearing alot about it.... any wondering how good it really is ??? Is it worth the money???

    Report Abuse
  • genieve's Avatar
    Posted by genieve Thu Feb 19, 2009 1:43am PST

    And ofcourse...being a girl i did a lot of heavy weights ..and then had my gynac instruct me to quit because of high levels of testosterone being produced because of the weights and the protein shakes.ended up with a hormonal imbalance..used to be a gym addict, now i am back on level one...all confused not knowing wat to do...im so heart broken..any solutions???????????????

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  • Weekend_Warrior's Avatar
    Posted by Weekend_Warrior Thu Feb 19, 2009 5:43am PST

    "Exercising too hard, too often?"

    That's interesting! Back in the day, I was a serious Gym-Rat! Now I hardly ever exercise at all. I think I've lost my "MO JO" :(

    Report Abuse
  • Wilfammmom's Avatar
    Posted by Wilfammmom Thu Feb 19, 2009 8:15am PST

    Loves this advice and it couldn't have came at a better time.

    Report Abuse
  • Mommy's Avatar
    Posted by Mommy Thu Feb 19, 2009 3:26pm PST

    I have actually been working out for almost 2 years and I have not noticed any change. I have switched up my workout and I do hard workouts with strength and cardio...I do kickboxing, cardio, walking, running, yoga, pilates....I have kept it up too. Nothing is helping. I have a food journal to keep track of what I eat and I don't want to write down junk food so I don't eat it. I just don't know what else to do. My doc has run several test to see what the prob is but nothing shows up. I have not even toned. I need my belly to tone and inner thighs. I have hit the gym and nothing has helped. Any suggestions? I am so upset and frustrated I feel like giving up but I won't. HELP

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Comments 1-10 of 229

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