Advice on Weightlifting
erc89432
Posts: 21
Hi! I'm a pretty active person but I stick mainly to cardio. I'm at a weight I am happy with but I'd like muscle definition. For a while now I've been wanting to start a weightlifting routine. The problem is- I'm not sure what to do for upper body. I have always had problems with upper body workouts because I'm not sure what to do to see results. I'd like a more muscular back and more muscular arms. Any tips?
(lower body tips are appreciated as well)
(lower body tips are appreciated as well)
0
Replies
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Think compound. Compound lifts are going to be the best use of your time, allowing you to recruit more muscles at a time. Focus on things like deadlift, squat, bench press, chin/pull ups, rows, overhead press, etc.
Many people on here recommend starting strength or stronglifts. I would look into those.
If you are looking for muscle definiton, that comes more from lowering body fat. But of course bigger and stronger muscles help too.
Certainly chins, rows, and deadlift (especially) from my list above are great options for your back.
And for arms: bench, chins, rows, dips, overhead press, even deadlift (forearms/grip).
There's lots of overlap, as you can see.0 -
starting strength
strong lifts
strong curves
new rules of lifting
all great places to start.
definitely look for compound lifts- they are the most bang for your buck and will help build a solid base of muscle- if you want to go to detailing you can do isolation's later but getting that base down is really important.0 -
Thank you so much! (:0
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Think compound. Compound lifts are going to be the best use of your time, allowing you to recruit more muscles at a time. Focus on things like deadlift, squat, bench press, chin/pull ups, rows, overhead press, etc.
Many people on here recommend starting strength or stronglifts. I would look into those.
If you are looking for muscle definiton, that comes more from lowering body fat. But of course bigger and stronger muscles help too.
Certainly chins, rows, and deadlift (especially) from my list above are great options for your back.
And for arms: bench, chins, rows, dips, overhead press, even deadlift (forearms/grip).
There's lots of overlap, as you can see.
Deadlifts, best upper body exercise. not.0 -
starting strength
strong lifts
strong curves
new rules of lifting
all great places to start.
definitely look for compound lifts- they are the most bang for your buck and will help build a solid base of muscle- if you want to go to detailing you can do isolation's later but getting that base down is really important.
all this ….0 -
Think compound. Compound lifts are going to be the best use of your time, allowing you to recruit more muscles at a time. Focus on things like deadlift, squat, bench press, chin/pull ups, rows, overhead press, etc.
Many people on here recommend starting strength or stronglifts. I would look into those.
If you are looking for muscle definiton, that comes more from lowering body fat. But of course bigger and stronger muscles help too.
Certainly chins, rows, and deadlift (especially) from my list above are great options for your back.
And for arms: bench, chins, rows, dips, overhead press, even deadlift (forearms/grip).
There's lots of overlap, as you can see.
Deadlifts, best upper body exercise. not.
That's not at all what I said. They're a great back exercise.0 -
deadlifts are a finger exercise for me. ughhhhh my grip.0
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starting strength
strong lifts
strong curves
new rules of lifting
all great places to start.
definitely look for compound lifts- they are the most bang for your buck and will help build a solid base of muscle- if you want to go to detailing you can do isolation's later but getting that base down is really important.
This^0 -
CrossFit! I started CrossFit the beginning of December and can definitely see the changes in my body! The workout is different every day also, so you are working different muscles daily.0
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My favorite upper body workout is negative pull ups. I'm working up to pull ups, but negative ones make me sore everywhere!0
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