strength training without going to the gym
mournemaid
Posts: 29 Member
Can you do strength training/lift weights at home and get good results. my finances won't stretch to a gym t the moment
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absolutely! check out: www.scoobysworkshop.com
there is a ton of good information about strength training at home.0 -
I have never had a gym membership in my 41 years on this planet but since I started doing some push-ups/pull-ups at home my progress has been great.
Push-ups getting easy? Add weight (backpack) or raise the feet ...
I guess it all depends on your goals but I'll get to where I need to be without a gym0 -
There are also some highly recommended videos on YouTube of guys who put together really challenging workouts using entirely body weight exercises. The only name I know off the top of my head is Craig Ballantyne and I might not have spelled that right.0
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I do all my strength training at home. I have medicine balls (4, 6, 10 lbs), dumbbells (2lbs to 15 lbs), resistance bands, exercise ball, pullup bar, etc.
If you have an iphone, there is a great program called Fitness Builder that has pre-programmed workouts for you, although I have gotten so that I design my own. They also have a website: fitnessbuilder.com0 -
Body weight exercises are great, but also check your newspaper's classifieds, Craigslist, yard sales and flea markets for used equipment.
I was spending $20 a month to go to the gym, but I hated going, so I bought a cheap bench and barbell set for about $100 from Sears. I figured it would pay for itself in 5 months. All the used ones I saw on Craigslist were over an hour away, and I'd spend $30 on gas to get there and back.0 -
Insanity, Tapout XT, P90X, P90X2 or just doing it on your own. Unless you just like going to a gym, which some people do, it is not necessary for fitness. Did no one learn anything from Jack LaLane?0
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Chalean Johnson's Chalean Extreme is great.0
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thanks for the advice. i am going to look at some of these options. recently had by body fat percentage and it is 46%. Scarey stuff as I am at an age when my muscle mass is likely to start decreasing if i don't do something about it.0
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Insanity, Tapout XT, P90X, P90X2 or just doing it on your own. Unless you just like going to a gym, which some people do, it is not necessary for fitness. Did no one learn anything from Jack LaLane?
Yup--I do P90X at home. And OMG, I grew up having the biggest crush on Jack LaLane!!!0 -
Yessssssssssss!!! My Health Trainer devised a powerful strength training programme that I can do at home in 20 - 25 minutes and work up a sweat to.0
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bump for later0
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Buy a Jillian DVD...30 day shred is a great one.
This website has challenges you can do that I've enjoyed: pushups, tricep dips, situps, squats
http://hundredpushups.com/
good luck!0 -
i just downloaded the book You Are Your Own Gym to my phone...lots of info on bodyweight exercises and it has workout plans as will as nutrition. And it gives you basic exercises and advanced to make it harder as you get more fit!0
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Here's a great article about training without the gym:
http://www.niashanks.com/2012/07/bodyweight-workouts-want-to-workout-anywhere/0 -
It can but you need to get some equipment. You want to try to do something that incorporates all of the following
Quad dominant leg (like squats)
Ham\glute dominant leg (deadlift variants)
Vertical Push (overhead pressing)
Horizontal push (flat bench presssing\pushups)
Vertical pull (pullup\chinup)
Horizontal Pull (bent over rows)
Here is a link that can be done with all dumbbells and preferably at least a flat bench of some sort http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=147447933
Notice that this is the third thread for this routine as the first 2 both reached 10,000 posts0 -
Body Sculpting Bible for Women is what I follow and I do it all at home. All you need is dumbbells0
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bump - for later.0
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Never thought I would recommend something I saw on a middle of the night infomercial; but P90X is the best 3 payments of $39.95 plus s/h I ever spent.0
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There is far more to it than can be contained in even one book. And there is no great single source. Use your google-fu.
But what you are looking for is called progressive calisthenics. Bodyweight exercises done progressively toward ever more difficult, lower leverage variants.
The nice thing is that you can add resistance to a lot of the movements, but because of leverage a little resistance goes a long way. Even your most powerful deadlifter will struggle to do a no-touch glute-ham raise with a single moderate dumbbell held overhead.
Some great web sources are gymnasitcbodies.com, beastskills.com, alkavadlo.com. Good books are overcoming gravity, building the gymnast body, you are your own gym, and convict conditioning.
Weight people are definitely better at programming. Take your routine constuction and rep/set guidelines from them.
I've posted this list before of exercises that I've compiled, but it is worth reposting:
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Low-no equipment exercises (google should explain any of them):
Upper Body Horizontal Push:
Easy/Remedial: Wall Pushup, Knee Pushup, Incline Pushups, Pushups
Moderate: Decline Pushups, Diamond Pushups, Divebomber Pushups, Uneven Pushups, Typerwriter Pushups, Incline One Arm Pushups, Clap Pushups, Planche Lean, Tuck Back Lever
Difficult: One Arm Pushups, Decline One Arm Pushups, Pseudo Planche Pushups, Pseudo Maltese Pushups, One Leg Back Lever, Straddle Back Lever, Back Lever, Tuck Planche Hold/Pushups, Straddle Planche Hold/Pushups, Full Planche Hold/Pushups
Assistance: DB FLys, Frog Stand, Straight Arm Frog Stand, German Hang
Upper Body Vertical Push:
Easy/Remedial: PB Support
Moderate: DB OHP, Handstand, Dip, Weighted Dips, Bar Dip, Pike Pushup, Headstand Pushup, Headstand Press
Difficult: L-Sit, Freestanding Handstand, Handstand Pushup, Handstand Press, Human Flag Tuck/Full
Assistance: Headstand
Upper Body Multiplane Push:
Difficult: L-Sit to Handstand Press, 90 Degree Pushups
Upper Body Horizontal Pull:
Easy/Remedial: DB Rows, Inverted Rows
Moderate: Tuck Front Lever, One Arm Inverted Rows
Difficult: Tuck Front Lever Rows, One Leg Front Lever Hold/Rows, Straddle Front Lever Hold/Rows, Front Lever Hold/Rows
Upper Body Vertical Pull:
Easy: Chair Assist Pullup/Chinup, Negative Pullup/Chinup
Moderate: Chinup, Pullup, Towel Pullups, Leg Assist Rope Climb, Rock Climbing
Difficult: Uneven Chinups, One Arm Chinup Negatives, One Arm Chinup, BW Curl, Arm Only Rope Climb
Assistance: Dead Hang, Inverted Hang, DB Curl
Upper Body Multiplane Pull:
Easy: Skin the Cat
Moderate: Bent Leg Middle Split Hold
Difficult: V-Sit, Middle Split Hold, Manna, Front Lever Pulls (Ice cream makers), Crank
Combined Upper Body:
Difficult: Muscle-Up, Elevator
Legs Quad Dominant:
Easy/Remedial: Wall Sit, BW Squat, BW Lunge, DB Squat
Moderate: Jump Squat, Pistol Squat, Falling Tower, One Leg Wall Sit, Weighted Lunges, DB Split Squat
Difficult: Shrimp Squat, DB Pistol Squat, Jumping Pistol Squat, Jumping Shrimp Squat, BW Leg Extensions
Assistance Exercises: DB Extension/Stall
Legs Posteior Dominant:
Easy/Remedial - BW Straight Leg Deadlift, Bridge, Straight Bridge, Side Leg Lift, BW Calf Raises
Moderate - BW One Leg Straight Leg Deadlift, King Deadlift, DB One Leg Straight Leg Deadlift, One Leg Bridge, One Leg Straight Bridge, DB Hip Thrust, DB One Leg Hip Thrust, Assisted Glute-Ham Raise/Stall, BW Good Morning, BW One Leg Calf Raise-Hold
Difficult - Glute-Ham Raise
All (difficulty scales) - Sprints, Hill Sprints, Bounding, Stair Runs, Weighted Sprints, Sled/Car Pull/Push
Core Ab Dominant:
Easy - Crunch, Situp, Plank, Knee Lift
Moderate - Hanging Knee Lift, Incline Situp, Hollow Hold, Boat, Touch the Sky, Hanging Leg Lift, Bicycle Crunch, Bent Leg Straddle L, Tuck Dragon Flag, Floor Wipers
Difficult -L-sit, V-sit, Straddle L, Dragon Flag, Body Lever, Hanging Situp, Front Lever var.
Core Back Dominant:
Easy - Bridge, Straight Bridge (Reverse Plank)
Moderate - Superman Hold, Full Bridge, Elbow Lever
Hard - One Arm Elbow Lever, Stand to Stand Bridge, Bridge to Handstand, Back Lever var.
Core Oblique Dominant:
Easy - Side Bends, Twisting Yoga Poses (many)
Moderate - Floor Wipers, Side Plank
Hard - Human Flag Tuck/Full, Side Lever Pulls
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I'm sure I'm leaving off a lot of stuff, especially the easy and obscenely hard, but that is a pretty good overview of what is possible. Most people will never run out of resistance.0 -
BUMP0
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Can you do strength training/lift weights at home and get good results. my finances won't stretch to a gym t the moment
Nope the minute you step into a different room it stops working.
Of course you can get good results. And if you can't afford weights you weigh weight, and so do house hold items0 -
bump for later0
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I'm a huge fan of You Are Your Own Gym by Mark Lauren. It is all body weight exercises and uses the same stuff he trained Spec Ops forces with in the military.0
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I have resistance bands and dumb bells but I think I am going to try P90X!0
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Actually there is a group that just formed & this is exactly what it's about - Strength training without a gym. Check it out!!
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/groups/home/7882-hooya-give-me-more
It's fueled by this book - Which I have heard great things about:
"You Are Your Own Gym" and it is by a man named Mark Lauren0 -
Bump0
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Bump for later. I need to read this list!
Thanks!0 -
bump0
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bump o0
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