Strength Training at Home Without Equipment?
gamommy
Posts: 131 Member
Hello! I'm good on cardio stuff, that's easy to do without having exercise equipment or a gym membership. We are on a strict budget as a one-income family of 5 and a gym membership is out of the question (hoping the parents will gift one at Christmastime!) for the moment.
I am not going to let not having access to a gym or not having money for weights be an excuse for not working out. I don't know a lot about weight/strength training or anything, but I know that it's something I'd like to learn more about it and I'm looking for any suggestions or information on ways to do this at home without having to purchase weights. Is this possible? Thanks!
I am not going to let not having access to a gym or not having money for weights be an excuse for not working out. I don't know a lot about weight/strength training or anything, but I know that it's something I'd like to learn more about it and I'm looking for any suggestions or information on ways to do this at home without having to purchase weights. Is this possible? Thanks!
0
Replies
-
Bodyweight stuff is what you are looking for! I use this beginner routine: https://fitloop.co/routines/bwf-beginner-routine0
-
Check out convict conditioning.0
-
Bodyweight stuff is what you are looking for! I use this beginner routine: https://fitloop.co/routines/bwf-beginner-routine
Awesome! Thank you so much!0 -
:flowerforyou: Squats, lunges., pushups, plank are all good choices
Take a look at this link for more ideas
http://greatist.com/fitness/50-bodyweight-exercises-you-can-do-anywhere0 -
I'm sort of in the same boat...my kids are both at school 3 days a week, so those are the days I run. When my little one is home the other 2 days I need to do workouts while watching her. There are a ton of videos on youtube, I personally like the fitness blender workouts (an adorable husband and wife combo.) They have some that use only body weight. They also have some using weights- I alternate upper and lower body strength using dumbbells between 8 -20 lbs, (so total 16-40 lbs). I know you said you didn't want to buy weights but new dumbbells aren't that much at target or on Amazon, plus you can often find them at garage sales.0
-
Resistance bands... cheaper ones are sold at most dollar stores. Resistance bands work great for for at home affordable strength training. I guess I am lucky in the fact that I live in a city that actually has a park where the playground equipment is actually work out equipment. Looks like a regular jungle gym and climbers of sorts from a distance, but on closer inspection, I realized it was work-out equipment that uses my own body weight as the weights. (Maybe there's a similar park around where you live, and you could google to find out...) otherwise, resistance bands is my only suggestion, sorry if that's not helpful.
http://greatist.com/fitness/resistance-band-exercises0 -
Start with body weight exercises - push ups, planks, squats. You can get a good start. In the meantime look into resistance band exercises. Bands gcan be used awhile. You chock up on them to increase resistance.
Look to Youtube or your local library for workouts.0 -
bump0
-
Resistance bands... cheaper ones are sold at most dollar stores. Resistance bands work great for for at home affordable strength training. I guess I am lucky in the fact that I live in a city that actually has a park where the playground equipment is actually work out equipment. Looks like a regular jungle gym and climbers of sorts from a distance, but on closer inspection, I realized it was work-out equipment that uses my own body weight as the weights. (Maybe there's a similar park around where you live, and you could google to find out...) otherwise, resistance bands is my only suggestion, sorry if that's not helpful.
http://greatist.com/fitness/resistance-band-exercises
wow- that park sounds great! I'm going to see if there is one near me!0 -
check out fitness blender on you tube. They have tons of videos for just about everything. I use them regularly.0
-
Little hand weights are cheap. Bottles of bleach or gallons of water will work.
If you have a pool, empty pop or milk bottles are cheap (and IMO, better than aqua barbells.)
Squats, lunges, push-ups, sit ups, crunches, six inches, planking...any old thing. Lots of stuff on google.
You can get fit without paying for a gym, for sure!!0 -
www.hundredpushups.com offers some good programmes for the above mentioned exercises, not just push ups.0
-
An excellent book on this subject is "You Are Your Own Gym" by Mark Lauren. It's 100% body weight exercises and has quite a broad variety, as well as some sample workouts and recommendations on how to progress.
You could get it from your library, local bookseller, or Amazon.0 -
An excellent book on this subject is "You Are Your Own Gym" by Mark Lauren. It's 100% body weight exercises and has quite a broad variety, as well as some sample workouts and recommendations on how to progress.
You could get it from your library, local bookseller, or Amazon.
There is also another one by him, Body By You by Mark Lauren with Joshua Clark, that is aimed at women. I just got that one myself to try out, still reading through it.0 -
oh yes do Planks most definitely and squats, you won't be sorry, they are most fantastic forms of weight training. Also if you have cans of soup you could use those for hand weights.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions