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Weight training
isn't a picnic or a walk in the park; it's
sweaty, gut busting work that, if done correctly,
has you treading the thin line between growth and
injury. If you train intensely - the only kind of
training that stimulates growth - you continually
flirt with muscle damage. Rubbing up against the
danger zone is where the muscular gains lie.
Injury is always
just ahead for the careless weight trainer.
There's something inherently dangerous about
pushing, tugging and straining against cold, hard
iron with all your might. But how else are you
going to stimulate those gains? Because the
quickest way to sidetrack progress or derail a
bodybuilding career is through debilitating
injury, you need to be a bit clairvoyant, learning
to avoid injuries before they happen. You can
accomplish this by listening to your body's
feedback and then making the appropriate
adjustments. Here are the 10 most common causes of
injury - let the bodybuilder beware.
1. Incorrect
Technique
The most common
weight training injuries are related to poor
exercise technique. Incorrect technique can pull,
rip or wrench a muscle, or tear delicate
connective tissue quicker than you can strike a
match. An out of control barbell or stray dumbbell
can wreak havoc in an instant.
Each human body has
very specific biomechanical pathways. Arms and
legs can only move in certain ways, particularly
if you're stress loading a limb with weight.
Strive to become a technical perfectionist and
respect the integrity of the exercise - no
twisting,, turning or contorting while pushing a
weight. Either make the rep using perfect
technique or miss the weight. Learn how to miss a
rep safely; learn how to bail out.
2. Too Much
Weight
Using too much
weight in an exercise is a high risk proposition
rife with injury potential. When it's too much: if
you can't control a weight as you lower it; if you
can't contain a movement within its biomechanical
boundaries; and if you have to jerk or heave a
weight in order to lift it.
An unchecked
barbell or dumbbell assumes a mind of its own; the
weight obeys the laws of gravity and seeks the
floor. Anything in its way (or attached to it) is
in danger.
3. Bad
Spotting
If you lift long
enough, you'll eventually reach a point where you
need to have a spotter for a number of exercises,
including the squat and bench press. When you work
as hard as you're supposed to, you occasionally
miss a rep. Nothing is wrong with that - it's a
sign that you're working to your limit, which is a
good thing if it isn't overdone. Yet when you work
this hard, you need competent spotters. A good
spotter should conduct him or herself at all times
as though the lifter is on the verge of total
failure. Your training partner can also lend a
gentle touch that allows you to complete a rep
you'd normally miss. A top spotter needs to be
strong, sensitive and ever alert to the
possibility of failure - not looking around or
joking with friends.
4. Incorrect
Use of Cheating & Forced Reps
Cheating and forced
reps are advanced techniques that allow the lifter
to train beyond normal. Taken past the point of
failure, the muscle is literally forced to grow.
When incorrectly performed, a cheating or forced
rep can push or pull the lifter out of the groove.
The weight collapses and a spotter must come to
the rescue.
Cheating movements
work; real world data prove this statement. Yet
cheating, by definition, is dangerous. Any time
you use momentum to artificially goose rep speed,
thus allowing you to handle more poundage than
when using strict techniques, you risk injury. To
play if safe, use the bare minimum cheat to
complete the rep. On forced reps, make sure your
training partner is on your wave length. Don't go
crazy.
5. Training
Too Often
How does
overtraining relate to injury? It negatively
impacts the body's overall level of strength and
conditioning. Overtraining saps energy, retarding
progress. You can't grow when you're overtrained.
It also interferes with both the muscles and the
nervous system's ability to recuperate - ATP
(adenosine triphosphate, an energy compound in the
cells) and glycogen stores are severely depleted
when an agitated metabolic status is present. In
such a depleted, weakened state, is it any wonder
that injury is common, particularly if the athlete
insists on handling big weights? The solution is
to cut back to 3-4 training sessions per week and
keep session length to no more than an hour.
6. Not
Stretching
Stretching is
different from warming up. Properly performed, a
stretch helps relax and elongate a muscle after
warm up and before and after weight training. As a
result of warming up and stretching, the muscle is
warm, loose and neurologically alert - in its most
pliable and injury resistant state. In addition,
stretching between sets actually helps build
muscle by promoting muscular circulation and
increasing the elasticity of the fascia casing
surrounding the muscle. Finally, if you perform
muscle specific stretches at the end of your
workout, you'll virtually eliminate next day
soreness.
7.
Inadequate Warm Up
Let's define our
terms. A warm up is usually a high rep, low
intensity, quick paced exercise used to increase
blood floor to the muscle. This quick, light
movement raises the temperature of the involved
muscle while decreasing blood viscosity and
promoting flexibility and mobility. How? Everyone
knows that a warm muscle with blood coursing
through it is more elastic and pliable than a
cold, stiff muscle. Riding a stationary bike,
jogging, swimming, stair climbing and some high
rep weight training are recommended forms of warm
up.
Try a 5-10 minute
formalized warm up before stretching. If you
choose high rep weight training, try 25 ultralight,
quick reps in the following nonstop sequence: calf
raise, squat, leg curl, crunch, pull down, bench
press and curl. Do one set each with no rest
between sets. This can be accomplished in fewer
than five minutes and warms every major muscle in
the body.
8. Negatives
Negative
(eccentric, or lowering) reps are one of the most
difficult and dangerous of all weight training
techniques - and very effective at stimulating
muscle growth. What makes negatives so risky? The
poundage you can handle in negative exercises is
likely to be the heaviest you'll ever lift.
Normally, we only
lift what we're capable of moving concentrically.
In negative training, we handle a lot more weight.
Most bodybuilders can control approximately 130%
of their concentric maximum on the eccentric phase
of a lift. Someone using 200 pounds for reps in
the bench press, for example, would bench roughly
260 in the negative press. Because of the
increased weight used with negatives, you need
strong, experienced spotters. Exercise extreme
caution. If the rep gets away from you, the
spotters need to grab the weight immediately.
9. Poor
Training
If you undereat and
continue to train hard and heavy, you're likely to
get hurt. Again, it relates to your overall
health: Before of heavy training when in a
weakened state brought on by severe dieting or
restricted eating. It's best to save the big
weights, low reps, forced reps and negatives for
nondiet growth periods. While dieting requires
reduced poundage, this doesn't mean you can't be
intense in your workout - it just means you need
to use lighter weight.
10.
Lack of Concentration
If you're
distracted, preoccupied or lackadaisical when you
work out, you're inviting injury. Watch a champion
bodybuilder train and one thing you'll notice is
his or her intense level of concentration. This is
developed over time, and the athlete
systematically develops a preset mental checklist
that allows him or her to focus on the task at
hand. More concentration equates to more poundage.
More poundage equates to more growth. More
poundage can lead to getting hurt if you don't pay
attention. Train smart.
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