Not Normal to be Injured While Lifting Weights

 guywithweights

 

 

 

IT IS ABSOLUTELY NOT NORMAL TO BE INJURED WHILE LIFTING WEIGHTS!!!

 

 

 

                              One trainer using the AFITNESSADDICTION.COM model recently commented that he had begun training a local 14 year old high school baseball player. The boy in this case was playing for a local high school coach who recently decided that all baseball players should lift weights.

Curious to find out what had been going on he asked him to explain the routine. The player said that 5 times per week the coach had the baseball team working in the weight room doing a series of dead lifts and various squats into clean and jerk combination moves.

What is wrong with this approach?

  1. The boy is 14 years old and has no weight training experience. He is a beginner.
  2. The boy has done no adaptive work and is now doing heavy power lifting with no fundamental work in progressive resistance training.
  3. The boy will be injured lifting these sets day after day – possibly seriously – possibly permanently.
  4. This coach does not understand that some exercises are not exercises. These exercises are competitive lifting events and are not designed for everyday workout routines.

Conclusion:

The weights, rep limits and number of sets is not correct for the sport in question and the age and experience of the athlete.

This is an injury waiting to happen.

It is almost CERTAIN TO HAPPEN unless something is done.

Coaches routinely prescribe workouts that are not appropriate for their teams because youth sport coaches are NOT PERSONAL TRAINERS.

 

Did you know that the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York requires cadets to perform a series of strength and cardio minimum certifications? And, if the cadet can reach that minimum certification he is then free to choose or develop his or her own workout program?

Last summer, two third year cadets from West Point were touring the United States and dropped in to workout at a gym where a personal trainer using the AFITNESSADDICTION.COM model for his clients worked. He was shocked to see these cadets using a program which was an American off shoot of the Russian power lifting protocol from the late 1950 era. He interviewed the cadets who swore that the program was helping them develop their strength. They had done some research into power development and were working out on their own with a program they found. Neither future officer played a sport at the service academy. Both felt that the injuries they sustained WHILE LIFTING were NORMAL for ANYONE who lifted weights.

  1. One had a torn shoulder rotator.
  2. The other had a knee ligament injury that required a brace to workout. (And the injured knee buckled during the workout to such an extent that a group of local accomplished weight lifters gathered around the young men and strongly suggested that they discontinue the sets they were performing. Their form was so bad and the weight so excessive that two of the watchers asked the gym fitness manager if the gym could force the cadets to stop lifting and ask them to leave the club).
  3. Both claimed that their mandatory timed mile runs were increasing rather than decreasing.

      4.   Both claimed that their strength gains were worth the pain and injuries.

 

It is not normal to be injured while training.

This is a serious misapplication of a specific type program. These athletes were continuously lifting amounts of weight that approximated and exceeded their one rep maximum limits. There was no developmental period. It was strictly week after week and month after month of extremely heavy weight training. They had selected the wrong program and they were damaging themselves and possibly their careers in the military. They were not power lifters. They were third year college students who needed a maximum strength program that would not create the body of a power lifter.

Our program costs $19.99 per month. It is custom tailored to your specific goals. It is based on your one rep max and can stress – maximum strength, weight loss, balanced core program or a maximum size program. The type program can be reset during the year and is completely unique for that individual.

You pay us $19.99 per month. We only collect one month at a time. No gym games – no sign up fees – no gym style funny business.  If it is easy to sign up, it should be easy to quit. That seems fair. You pay us $19.99 per month.  You are in control. If you are unhappy or don’t want to work out, then you can terminate the billing on line through your computer – that’s it, that’s all, the end, finished. Be safe out there. We want to help.

Sign up today and get your first month FREE, thats right FREE…. Hurry offer ends soon!!!

 

 

 

16 Responses to “Not Normal to be Injured While Lifting Weights”

  1. old gym rat says:

    Most people do not even know what a one rep maximum lift is. thanks for the info….great site….

  2. old gym rat says:

    Sorry, meant to add that it is down right scary to watch high school coaches who have no training experience try to train young athletes just because they read about something. What if the training was for college athleetes and they are high school coaches? Age is an important factor, right? also strength and experience lifting. They get all gung ho and have no idea that you cannot get in shape in a week or two and then do heavy lifting or plyometrics etc. Thanks again….

  3. Kelly Moyle says:

    Would you happen to know if it’s's safe to lift weights while attempting to lose weight? I’ve made it my new years resolution so I am trying to stay with it.

  4. Al Green says:

    I really enjoy the quality information you offer to your visitors

  5. Brian Higgins says:

    I really like this blog. Please continue the great work. Regards!!!

  6. Admin says:

    Yes It most definitely is. This is a lot of what our program has to offer. Have you checked out our website? http://www.afitnessaddiction.com . Check it out, we can start you out on an adaptive phase, which slowly gets your body used to lifting weights. Check it out and see what you think. Thanks

  7. Natasha Rance says:

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  11. weight bench says:

    The pics aren’t showing up in your post. Maybe its just my computer but I’ve tried it in a couple of different browsers now and still no luck.

  12. best lower ab workout says:

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  13. Afitnessaddiction.com says:

    Is there another computer you could try? I’ve double checked with a few different browsers on a few different computers and the pictures are showing up fine here. Try clearing the cache in your browser. That may help?

  14. Carl Bernsen says:

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