Over40
01-21-2006, 11:12 AM
Last year, and the year before I went through a high intensity weight lifting phase (which I have done on and off over the years). I am sure many of you are acquinted with Ellington Darden, Arthur Jones, etc. That was the route I took, and it went fine. Then I started reading more about slow cadence resistance training, SuperSlow, turtle reps, whatever you want to call it.
The premise behind this theory is that "true" exercise is dangerous, therefore you should make it as safe as possible. So there I was, in the high school Nautilus room, with a stop watch, doing 10/10 (ten seconds up, ten seconds down) reps and half my students thinking I'd gone nuts. Oh, and to avoid overtraining you only lift once a week. Rest the rest of the time.
I did this from Nov. 04 to Feb. 05. I did get stronger. But, I could almost feel what conditioning I had just evaporate. I couldn't walk up the stairs to the weight room without sucking wind. Skiing was a chore, and shoveling the sidewalk was hideous.
Hence the title of my thread, I find it paradoxical that people are pushing an exercise protocol that they are claiming is the apex of weightlifting systems (one book on the subject is called "Ultimate Exercise"), and yet after three months of doing it I was the most out of shape I had been in sometime.
Got to have balance.
Jon
The premise behind this theory is that "true" exercise is dangerous, therefore you should make it as safe as possible. So there I was, in the high school Nautilus room, with a stop watch, doing 10/10 (ten seconds up, ten seconds down) reps and half my students thinking I'd gone nuts. Oh, and to avoid overtraining you only lift once a week. Rest the rest of the time.
I did this from Nov. 04 to Feb. 05. I did get stronger. But, I could almost feel what conditioning I had just evaporate. I couldn't walk up the stairs to the weight room without sucking wind. Skiing was a chore, and shoveling the sidewalk was hideous.
Hence the title of my thread, I find it paradoxical that people are pushing an exercise protocol that they are claiming is the apex of weightlifting systems (one book on the subject is called "Ultimate Exercise"), and yet after three months of doing it I was the most out of shape I had been in sometime.
Got to have balance.
Jon