Weight routine?
RoyalWarrior
Posts: 9 Member
I'm not sure if there is already a post on this topic, but I was wondering about a routine for lifting. I am somewhat new to lifting, and will be lifting at home because my husband has a weight bench and dumbbells, as well as a French curl bar. But I feel like I need a better plan of attack, and a set routine to work through instead of lifting at random. Any advice?
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Replies
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Maybe take a look at Starting Strength? You might need to invest in a new barbell, but if you are looking for a good lifting routine if you don't know much, that's one of the best out there.0
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Is that a book, or an online article?0
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There is an app out there called fitness buddy that I used when I got started lifting. It has workout programs and lifting schedules that you can use to develop a good plan. I took a few different programs and modified them to get what I wanted out of them. It also allows you to keep up with a calendar and each workout, weight, reps, and sets. I believe there are about 1,500 or so exercises, which you can also choose from free weights or machines to body weight exercises. If you'd like a set plan I'd be happy to share my schedule if you're interested.0
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Thanks for the tips!0
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Beachbody has quite a few really awesome at home programs for lifting! The Les Milles Pump series is great! I just started coaching with Beachbody after losing twenty pounds on one of their programs over two months.0
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@RoyalWarrior: It is a book, but pretty cheap (the ebook is like $10 on Amazon), but there is also a wiki that describes the routine if you are feeling extra super cheap, like I am, lol. Skippy has another good beginner routine in SL. They are very, very similar.
EDIT: $10 yosassi is a coach and just wants you to buy from her. Don't bother.0 -
Please ignore the beachbody spam.
Also consider new rules of lifting for women.0 -
As a newbie, find a good full body lifting you can do 2-3x a week. Bodybuilding.com is one good resource.0
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@RoyalWarrior: It is a book, but pretty cheap (the ebook is like $10 on Amazon), but there is also a wiki that describes the routine if you are feeling extra super cheap, like I am, lol. Skippy has another good beginner routine in SL. They are very, very similar.
EDIT: $10 yosassi is a coach and just wants you to buy from her. Don't bother.0 -
Ooh lifting is the best! You'll love it!
I didn't actually start SEEING results on my body until I started lifting, my arms have always been puny and when I started seeing muscle definition them I was really excited.
It's so good for you too because it builds the muscle and gets you physically stronger so any other fitness you undertake will be easier as a result.0 -
I'm actually not a coach yet, just a customer who had a great success! Thanks for the thought though! I would love to be one eventually0
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There are several good beginner strength programs around, a few of which have already been mentioned. My standard list of recommendations:
Starting Strength
Stronglifts 5x5
all-pro beginner
New Rules of Lifting
Strong Curves
They are all good programs. As a new lifter, you'll make a lot of fast progress no matter which program you use, so pick the one that looks like most fun and jump in! Be sure to learn the progression rules and the de-load rules, which is where the real strength improvement happens.0
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