Girls or guys. Whats a decent free weight weight for me?
itsjosiebitch
Posts: 68 Member
I'm 5'5, 150 pounds. I'm a girl btw. I was wondering what a good weight for me lift would be? 1 pound? 5 pounds? 10 pounds?
My brother has weights. The lightest he has is 10 pounds. Is that too heavy for beginners?
Yes I want to get stronger but not bulky. Somethings telling me that five pounds would be best
My brother has weights. The lightest he has is 10 pounds. Is that too heavy for beginners?
Yes I want to get stronger but not bulky. Somethings telling me that five pounds would be best
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Replies
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Depends what you are doing.....how many sets and reps, what movement, etc.0
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It's going to depend on the exercise. I've never known any woman who couldn't do at least the bar for the major compound exercises (45lbs) but for something like a lateral raise, 5-10lbs for 10 reps is probably more like it. Plus, you will progress so quickly in the first months (probably at least 5-10lbs a week).
So in other words, there is no one weight that will work. You will need a wide variety of weights.0 -
Start at 10lbs for a warm up set and go heavy as you can
The trick is to lift heavy and lower reps not countless reps of low weights
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So it's not too much? Cool. I'm open to suggestions. I'm a newb0
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pretty good test for weights
> if you can't pick it up - it's too heavy
> if you can only do 1-2 it's still to heavy unless you're specifically testing a one rep mex lift- which you aren't.
> if you can do 15-25 of them- it's probably do light.0 -
It's going to depend on the exercise. I've never known any woman who couldn't do at least the bar for the major compound exercises (45lbs) but for something like a lateral raise, 5-10lbs for 10 reps is probably more like it. Plus, you will progress so quickly in the first months (probably at least 5-10lbs a week).
So in other words, there is no one weight that will work. You will need a wide variety of weights.
I'm not saying I'm weak. I could lift a 200 person off the ground. BTW I'm talking about dumbbells. See I'm a newb. Didn't even know what they were called. I think that's what they're called.
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pretty good test for weights
> if you can't pick it up - it's too heavy
> if you can only do 1-2 it's still to heavy unless you're specifically testing a one rep mex lift- which you aren't.
> if you can do 15-25 of them- it's probably do light.
Thank you. I could probably do like 10 reps with these. But lifting it up above my head- like one
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Do you have a structured programme to follow
Books like Strong Curves or New Rules of Lifting for Women might be good initial guides
Or http://stronglifts.com/5x5/ for a good compound lift programme
There are others0 -
itsjosiebitch wrote: »It's going to depend on the exercise. I've never known any woman who couldn't do at least the bar for the major compound exercises (45lbs) but for something like a lateral raise, 5-10lbs for 10 reps is probably more like it. Plus, you will progress so quickly in the first months (probably at least 5-10lbs a week).
So in other words, there is no one weight that will work. You will need a wide variety of weights.
I'm not saying I'm weak. I could lift a 200 person off the ground. BTW I'm talking about dumbbells. See I'm a newb. Didn't even know what they were called. I think that's what they're called.
Yes, same principle applies. You will need a wide variety of DBs or adjustable DBs. The weight used will be different for almost every exercise.
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itsjosiebitch wrote: »It's going to depend on the exercise. I've never known any woman who couldn't do at least the bar for the major compound exercises (45lbs) but for something like a lateral raise, 5-10lbs for 10 reps is probably more like it. Plus, you will progress so quickly in the first months (probably at least 5-10lbs a week).
So in other words, there is no one weight that will work. You will need a wide variety of weights.
I'm not saying I'm weak. I could lift a 200 person off the ground. BTW I'm talking about dumbbells. See I'm a newb. Didn't even know what they were called. I think that's what they're called.
Yes, same principle applies. You will need a wide variety of DBs or adjustable DBs. The weight used will be different for almost every exercise.
I totally understand.0 -
Just pick the weights up and see what weights you can do a 3 sets of 12 reps comfortably, then go up half a size. That's what I did when I was first starting just to get an idea of how strong I was.0
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Not sure what your goals are, but if you're doing a beginner strength program, 10 pounds is almost worthless. I'd be willing to bet you could squat and deadlift more than 50 pounds today.
If you want to do a strength program, don't make up your own. Pick a good one that's been used by thousands of people and follow it to the letter. I can recommend a few: Starting Strength, Stronglifts 5x5, New Rules of Lifting, all pro beginner, or Strong Curves.
If you don't have the equipment to do a free weight strength program (squat rack, barbell, and bench), try a bodyweight program, which takes almost not equipment. You Are Your Own Gym, Convict Conditioning, or Body By You are books with good programs.
You won't bulk up on any beginner strength program as long as you aren't eating at a surplus.0
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