How long did it take for your non-dominant side to catch up?
dubble818
Posts: 132 Member
I've been working primarily with dumbbells in hopes of getting a little more balanced. My left arm is considerably weaker and gasses out before the right even feels like it's getting warmed up.
I've been eating right and lifting 3 days per week. How long do you think it will take to balance things out?
I've been eating right and lifting 3 days per week. How long do you think it will take to balance things out?
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Replies
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I've been lifting 7 years and I'm still not balanced (strength and proportions).3
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I have been lifting for years too and my left side is still weaker1
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It won't ever be 100% balanced.1
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If your imbalance is that bad your warmup sets may be too many, or to heavy, or both.
You didn't mention what program or exercise you're doing0 -
Been lifting 3 years and I am not balanced in strength or size either.1
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stanmann571 wrote: »If your imbalance is that bad your warmup sets may be too many, or to heavy, or both.
You didn't mention what program or exercise you're doing
I'm working with a personal trainer for an hour 3 days per week. We do a push, pull, and leg day. We start with compound lifts and move on to isolation exercises and ab work for the last 20 minutes or so. I've been squatting, deadlifting, db chest pressing, assisted pull ups, etc. It's been several months and I'm seeing strength gains, but it always feels like my right side is barely breaking a sweat while my left struggles to get reps in.0 -
stanmann571 wrote: »If your imbalance is that bad your warmup sets may be too many, or to heavy, or both.
You didn't mention what program or exercise you're doing
I'm working with a personal trainer for an hour 3 days per week. We do a push, pull, and leg day. We start with compound lifts and move on to isolation exercises and ab work for the last 20 minutes or so. I've been squatting, deadlifting, db chest pressing, assisted pull ups, etc. It's been several months and I'm seeing strength gains, but it always feels like my right side is barely breaking a sweat while my left struggles to get reps in.
If you're paying a Trainer, that's who I would ask.1 -
Thanks for the responses everyone. Much appreciated. Suppose I should reword the question - how long until your non-dominant side could keep up with the dominant one?0
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Thanks for the responses everyone. Much appreciated. Suppose I should reword the question - how long until your non-dominant side could keep up with the dominant one?
For Dumbell press(for example, my non-dominant side normally runs 5-10 % or less or 1 rep or so behind) In other words, If I'm doing 55s or 60s, I might have 10 reps vs 9... or I could asymmetrically press 10x55 and 10x60
Not sure why you're mixing in isolation exercises after you've pre-fatigued your muscles with complex movements, but again, that's a question your trainer should be answering
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What's wrong with doing isolations after compounds? What would be strange - and dangerous, would be to do isolation work first and then attempt heavy compounds.0
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jseams1234 wrote: »What's wrong with doing isolations after compounds? What would be strange - and dangerous, would be to do isolation work first and then attempt heavy compounds.
Yea, I am confused by this as well. All good programs start with compounds and then utilize isolation to work on the small supporting muscles that aren't being addressed by the compound moves.1
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