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No biggie, rij. It is a very VERY common myth nowadays. I actually still have a pair of 3 lb dumbbells from my "toning" days.![]()
Live and learn!
Good thread!
I've been lifting 'hard & heavy' for about a year now and found that having upper body strength definatly helps with endurance.
I'm curling 17lb per arm for bicep training, about 10-12lb for ticeps (hate working those, grrr.) and pressing 25lb for chest. All aiming in around 10-14reps, and 4-6 sets.
Last year i could barely curl 10lb for 20reps! using both hands!
I only wish i had read up on weight training before I wasted about 4months using the wrong weight for my goals
BUT:
I have used http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/index.html since the start of this year & this has really helped me understand all about muscle, how it works & what it needs to build/repair.
You should be able to find a lot of info on there (dont let it scare you lol, it scared me for a while with all these big heavy men all over the place, but it has good info no matter what your goals are)
...and yes, it can get addictive! just like cycling
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Hope you acheive your goals, you have already done great loosing the weight!
Last edited by Suzi-Sue; 07-08-2007 at 11:08 AM.
Well, there's a kernel of truth there, even if "toning/bulking" isn't the most accurate description... Weightlifting that emphasizes high reps (8-12, or more) with (relatively) low weight increases muscular endurance (trains slow-twitch fibers that marathon runners depend on), while weightlifting that emphasizes low reps (4-6) with heavy weight increases explosive power (trains fast-twitch muscles that sprinters depend on). Either way though, to really benefit, you should reach failure at (or occasionally before!) the last rep -- so the 2lb weights probably aren't doing that for you.
Most of what I've read regarding weight training for endurance athletes, however, suggests that low reps/heavy weights are more useful even for endurance athletes, given that everyone has limited time for training and most endurance athletes are able to do a pretty good job building muscular endurance just by their core training activities (running, cycling etc). If time/fatigue/overtraining is not an obstacle, one could combine both types of weight training into his or her training schedule, or could periodize (maybe endurance-focused lifting in the off-season, segueing into power-focused lifting during race/event season, if there is one).
I go through phases where I'm good about lifting and phases where I'm not, and I feel much better in every respect when I'm doing it (note to self: start going to gym again...). I have some weights at home but ultimately I need to go to the gym to really lift, since the amount of weight I need to get a good workout for my lower body is far more than I can lift over my head, and I don't have a rack or anything like that at home.
Last edited by VeloVT; 07-08-2007 at 08:54 PM.