AWESOME stuff you see at the gym

2»

Replies

  • stormieweather
    stormieweather Posts: 2,549 Member
    There is a guy who is in my gym every single time I'm there (I'm there 6 days a week) for the last 3 years. He is a skinny little thing, wears a woven choker. Does hours and hours of isolate-type exercises. Some of them are so obscure you can barely detect any movement on his part. Never ever does any compound lifts.

    I often wonder what he thinks he's accomplishing....
  • amy1612
    amy1612 Posts: 1,356 Member
    I didnt 'actually' see it, but a couple of weeks ago there was a full on fight in my gym over a fan!
  • chubby_checkers
    chubby_checkers Posts: 2,352 Member
    I didnt 'actually' see it, but a couple of weeks ago there was a full on fight in my gym over a fan!

    :laugh: As someone that sweats profusely (as in, "Why did that red-face girl jump in the pool with all of her clothes on"), I've often thought of taking people out over a fan.
  • gigishiree
    gigishiree Posts: 62 Member
    I once saw a guy running backwards on a treadmill. all eyes were glued to him ....just waiting. he fell like 5 times before the attendant asked him to leave. lol. i think we were all trying to figure out just what it was he was trying to achieve. idk.

    oh and he had on rediculous knee socks. like with who does that?
  • gigishiree
    gigishiree Posts: 62 Member
    I also once saw a guy doing these stupid looking karate moves ........while holding heavy barbells! Then one slipped and flew across the room. Such a freaking retard.


    PS
    This didnt happen at the gym

    PPS
    Im ashamed to say it happend at home and he was my weirdo ex bf. Real keeper, that one.
  • mandasimba
    mandasimba Posts: 782 Member
    I've more than a haldful of times, people using the assisted pull up machine for a leg worout. I go to a Lifetime, so it is a large gym with plenty of equipment so it isn't like they are lacking something.

    http://deadsimplediet.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Assisted-Pull-Up-Machine.jpg

    They put one foot on the top step, the other foot on the assisting part and push down, over and over...
  • kazzari
    kazzari Posts: 473 Member
    oohhh speaking of bruising I once saw someone doing jump squats with the barbell. it seemed like a really bad idea.

    omg. this is just ridiculous.

    This is a legitimate exercise. It has been in a few workout programs I've used. As long as the barbell is in the low position, it really isn't particularly dangerous. The bar shouldn't be rising up and slamming back down as you land. I have seen others do it and it does seem scary, but when I tried it, I found it wasn't very scary, or painful, or dangerous at all. But one should still have lifting experience and exercise care.
  • mandasimba
    mandasimba Posts: 782 Member
    This isn't an oddball thing, but in fact an AWESOME thing I saw at the gym. I saw a early 20s kid with, what I'd call the college basketball physique - fit, but still kind of skinny, nothing buldging. He had, from what I could tell (didn't have contacts or glasses on, but my eyes aren't that bad) about 430 on a bar. Deadlifted it. I thought he was going to leave his rectum behind on the floor, but he got it up, and great form.
  • ishtar13
    ishtar13 Posts: 528 Member
    This isn't an oddball thing, but in fact an AWESOME thing I saw at the gym. I saw a early 20s kid with, what I'd call the college basketball physique - fit, but still kind of skinny, nothing buldging. He had, from what I could tell (didn't have contacts or glasses on, but my eyes aren't that bad) about 430 on a bar. Deadlifted it. I thought he was going to leave his rectum behind on the floor, but he got it up, and great form.

    That is completely awesome!
  • tameko2
    tameko2 Posts: 31,634 Member
    oohhh speaking of bruising I once saw someone doing jump squats with the barbell. it seemed like a really bad idea.

    omg. this is just ridiculous.

    This is a legitimate exercise. It has been in a few workout programs I've used. As long as the barbell is in the low position, it really isn't particularly dangerous. The bar shouldn't be rising up and slamming back down as you land. I have seen others do it and it does seem scary, but when I tried it, I found it wasn't very scary, or painful, or dangerous at all. But one should still have lifting experience and exercise care.

    They were NOT doing it right, and I think one of the problems with people reading about this kind of exercise (ok, lets be honest here, this is mostly a guy problem) is that they will just charge in and grit their teeth through the bouncing bar instead of thinking "am I doing something wrong? Should this HURT?"
  • kazzari
    kazzari Posts: 473 Member
    They were NOT doing it right, and I think one of the problems with people reading about this kind of exercise (ok, lets be honest here, this is mostly a guy problem) is that they will just charge in and grit their teeth through the bouncing bar instead of thinking "am I doing something wrong? Should this HURT?"

    Good point! LOL. Actually, I don't see a lot of people doing them and the last one was a female athlete. I know I saw somebody doing something at the gym recently that made me cringe, but I'm old and forgetful and I can't remember what it was.
  • amy1612
    amy1612 Posts: 1,356 Member
    Lol,also,shamefull,Ill admit,ive used the smith to hang upside down and do reverse cruches/flex work.
  • Nataliaho
    Nataliaho Posts: 878 Member
    I hate to be a know it all, but some of the stuff you guys are describing could easily be quite legitimate. Quarter squats are used for various reasons, in particular by bodybuilders to isolate upper thighs with heavier weights than they could fully squat. The bench bouncy thing could have been because there person was having trouble with locking out at the top of their bench, so they want to again isolate that part of their lift with a heavier than usual weight but they didn't have a couple of spotters to lift it half way for them. I guess I am saying I wouldn't be so quick to judge people that are doing something you don't understand... it could be because well, you don't understand.

    As for something truly awesome I love seeing at my gym, there are these two guys who are the most quiet, shy, big nerdy dudes who work in IT. They are hefty guys who lift some insane weights, but are so modest about it. I wonder if any of their colleagues realise what they are serious beasts!!
  • irridia
    irridia Posts: 527 Member
    <
    Hangs from my bar on the squat rack from one arm with knees on the floor to stretch my lats
    :noway:
  • tameko2
    tameko2 Posts: 31,634 Member
    I hate to be a know it all, but some of the stuff you guys are describing could easily be quite legitimate. Quarter squats are used for various reasons, in particular by bodybuilders to isolate upper thighs with heavier weights than they could fully squat. The bench bouncy thing could have been because there person was having trouble with locking out at the top of their bench, so they want to again isolate that part of their lift with a heavier than usual weight but they didn't have a couple of spotters to lift it half way for them. I guess I am saying I wouldn't be so quick to judge people that are doing something you don't understand... it could be because well, you don't understand.

    As for something truly awesome I love seeing at my gym, there are these two guys who are the most quiet, shy, big nerdy dudes who work in IT. They are hefty guys who lift some insane weights, but are so modest about it. I wonder if any of their colleagues realise what they are serious beasts!!

    Its usually quite obvious who is doing something because they don't know what they are doing or read it in a magazine and who is actually a serious body builder working on some isolation areas or a powerlifting pushing through a weak spot. These people are never them. (my gym has maybe 3 powerlifters and 2 bodybuilders, the rest are just doing whatever they've "heard" is good or copying what they see other people doing. Oh and one guy doing oly lifts which really sucks for him because its a 24 hour fitness and there is barely ANY open floor space -- but I've looked for myself and we're in some kind of lifting deadzone so your choices are to lift at a big box gym or drive quite a ways)

    But that is a fair point in general.

    Speaking of being able to tell who knows what the hell they are doing, my husband thought it was really cool when the guy that squats 325 came over and asked me where I got my fractionals.
  • Nataliaho
    Nataliaho Posts: 878 Member
    I hate to be a know it all, but some of the stuff you guys are describing could easily be quite legitimate. Quarter squats are used for various reasons, in particular by bodybuilders to isolate upper thighs with heavier weights than they could fully squat. The bench bouncy thing could have been because there person was having trouble with locking out at the top of their bench, so they want to again isolate that part of their lift with a heavier than usual weight but they didn't have a couple of spotters to lift it half way for them. I guess I am saying I wouldn't be so quick to judge people that are doing something you don't understand... it could be because well, you don't understand.

    As for something truly awesome I love seeing at my gym, there are these two guys who are the most quiet, shy, big nerdy dudes who work in IT. They are hefty guys who lift some insane weights, but are so modest about it. I wonder if any of their colleagues realise what they are serious beasts!!

    Its usually quite obvious who is doing something because they don't know what they are doing or read it in a magazine and who is actually a serious body builder working on some isolation areas or a powerlifting pushing through a weak spot. These people are never them. (my gym has maybe 3 powerlifters and 2 bodybuilders, the rest are just doing whatever they've "heard" is good or copying what they see other people doing. Oh and one guy doing oly lifts which really sucks for him because its a 24 hour fitness and there is barely ANY open floor space -- but I've looked for myself and we're in some kind of lifting deadzone so your choices are to lift at a big box gym or drive quite a ways)

    But that is a fair point in general.

    Speaking of being able to tell who knows what the hell they are doing, my husband thought it was really cool when the guy that squats 325 came over and asked me where I got my fractionals.

    Sure thing, plus I know you know your stuff. I guess I have just read alot of posts/threads like this one and I am just urging a little caution to others about making quick judgements. SS and NROLFW are great resources, but they obviously don't represent the entire body of knowledge when it comes to weightlifting :) I train at a powerlifting/strongman gym, so that's all I see. Some of the crazy apparatus and movements and methods they use would probably look nutso to the untrained eye!
  • amy1612
    amy1612 Posts: 1,356 Member
    Stronglifts is totally making me bad though. There was a guy started doing smith machine squats yesterday next to me, and I wanted to turn round and be like 'you totally shouldnt use the smith,it'll jack your knees, Im almost done with the rack'. Gah!!!
  • gemiwing
    gemiwing Posts: 1,525 Member
    I train at a powerlifting/strongman gym, so that's all I see.

    And this is why I'm jealous. No powerlifting gym here :(
  • ishtar13
    ishtar13 Posts: 528 Member
    Saw something very odd today.

    A woman with a girl. The girl was about 13? 14? **

    The mom was showing the girl how to do this bizarre wannabe windmill-type exercise. They stood in a hamstring stretch like this

    standing_hamstring_stretch.jpg

    They had dumbbells* placed outside their legs, half a foot away or so, bent down, reached with the left arm to pick up the right dumbbell, stood up and reached the left arm behind them with the weight, put the weight down where they found it, switched legs and did the other side.

    It was bizarre.

    *5 lbs for mom, 3 lbs for daughter - my gym doesn't have 3 lb weights, so mom must have brought them from home.


    **mom was totally into it, girl was bored.
  • tameko2
    tameko2 Posts: 31,634 Member
    My trainer had me do some weird positioned stuff, back when I had one, that I guess was for small muscle focus day? which I found tedious as heck. But I can imagine some people really liking it. I imagine it LOOKS totally ridiculous though (although hey, pendlay rows look REALLY effing ridiculous). Also I have never gotten in that position as anything other than a stretch.

    The thing I remember was she made me stand on my toes and do forward lunges while holding small dumbells and then while deep into the lunge, leaning forward and then doing a shoulder press followed by a tricep kickback while holding that position on my TOES. It was complicated and DIFFICULT - I did not care for it, but I did feel sore and exhausted afterwards and I know a lot of people feel like that means its a good workout. I don't agree with that personally - being sore and exhausted just means you are sore and exhausted, just like sweating just means your body is engaged in heat regulation.

    I actually feel sort of bad for people doing that crap - I do recognize that some probably genuinely like it, but they could be doing something so much more effective and satisfying (it is just plain satisfying as hell to say you did something with 100 lbs instead of 5). There's this girl at my gym who has been coming in with her boyfriend and he has her follow him around doing things that are just .... well. I mean technically NOTHING you do wiht your body is 100% pointless, but given that i assume her goals are body changes (she is active-overweight looking - firm but pretty big) those calf raises, shrugs, and bicep curls aren't doing near as much to get her there as something else would.
  • Nataliaho
    Nataliaho Posts: 878 Member
    I train at a powerlifting/strongman gym, so that's all I see.

    And this is why I'm jealous. No powerlifting gym here :(

    I love it there, there's no treadmills, no les mills classes and best of all no Bro's!! The guys and girls train for strength, not vanity, so its a different vibe altogether.
  • tameko2
    tameko2 Posts: 31,634 Member
    I train at a powerlifting/strongman gym, so that's all I see.

    And this is why I'm jealous. No powerlifting gym here :(

    I love it there, there's no treadmills, no les mills classes and best of all no Bro's!! The guys and girls train for strength, not vanity, so its a different vibe altogether.

    I am jealous too, I actually googled like crazy to find one and I'm flat out in a deadzone. No oly gyms, no pl gyms, the only thing even remotely close is a crossfit and its still pretty far
  • Nataliaho
    Nataliaho Posts: 878 Member
    I train at a powerlifting/strongman gym, so that's all I see.

    And this is why I'm jealous. No powerlifting gym here :(

    I love it there, there's no treadmills, no les mills classes and best of all no Bro's!! The guys and girls train for strength, not vanity, so its a different vibe altogether.

    I am jealous too, I actually googled like crazy to find one and I'm flat out in a deadzone. No oly gyms, no pl gyms, the only thing even remotely close is a crossfit and its still pretty far

    Having a trainer really helps you to increase your lifts too. Just getting visibility of what women are lifting and what you can actually lift is so good. I do my training 50/50 between my PL gym and my crossfit box. Best of both worlds for me, I hope to never ever be a member at a gym with a treadmill lol.